Haciendo el Mal
Cruz Cafuné
"Haciendo el Mal" pulses with the murky self-awareness of someone who knows they're hurting people and can't quite stop themselves. Cruz Cafuné wraps confessional guilt in Spanish trap production — layered 808s that feel underwater, warped synth textures, and a low-temperature beat that never fully erupts. His delivery is characteristically understated, almost sleepy, which makes the emotional weight hit harder than any shout could. The lyrics orbit themes of romantic damage and moral drift, the singer casting himself as a bad actor who recognizes his own pattern but remains caught in it. Cafuné's Barcelona upbringing bleeds through in the blend of street realism and melodic introspection that defines the new wave of Spanish urban music. Production detail is everything here — reverbed hi-hats, distant piano chords, space used as texture. Best heard late at night, alone, when the gap between who you are and who you meant to be feels widest.
slow
2020s
murky, submerged, sparse
Spain (Barcelona)
Spanish trap, melodic urban. trap confesional. dark, guilty. Begins with murky self-awareness and stays suspended in the uncomfortable space of recognized but unresolved moral drift.. energy 3. slow. danceability 3. valence 3. vocals: understated, sleepy, confessional, emotionally weighted, understated. production: underwater 808s, warped synths, reverbed hi-hats, distant piano chords. texture: murky, submerged, sparse. acousticness 2. era: 2020s. Spain (Barcelona). Late at night alone when the gap between who you are and who you meant to be feels widest.