At a time when Shakira’s songs are on everyone’s lips because of how the Colombian singer has emotionally vented through her compositions, Rosario Mohedano, who rejects any comparison with a mischievous smile, is back in the news musically speaking for the publication of a song with an enormous symbolic charge and a whole declaration of intent for whoever wants to listen to it.

The interpreter, who is about to turn 44, is triumphing with her song De qué vas, a song that came out of her bowels five years ago, but has remained dormant until now. The daughter of Rosa Benito and Amador Mohedano, and niece of Rocío Jurado, gave an intense talk with this medium a few days ago, in which she recognized that this song had been a catharsis to talk about what she points out as a public humiliation after For a few years, she participated in Telecinco spaces directed by the production company La Fábrica de la Tele, which later harassed her.

“Everything I’ve been through has helped me to get to know myself better and to know how to manage what I can change, the rest of the things no longer interest me,” the artist is sincere.

In a moment of helplessness when she saw that they were talking about her life again on that channel, Rosario Mohedano began to order her bathroom and hum a song that she created in a matter of an hour, the one that has come out the fastest in her entire professional career. “I felt comfortable, but I feel more comfortable when I sing it. It’s a liberation,” she asserts.

It so happens that Rosario has launched the song at a time when her name, along with that of her mother, are on the list of personalities banned from the different Telecinco programs as a result of the restructuring at the top of the group after Vasile’s departure. Although she is living this stage more calmly now, the interpreter does not forget all the pain caused by a producer whose husband Andrés recently won a trial for revealing secrets after a police file of hers was made public from a program. The case has had more relevance if possible, since her statement was included in the so-called Deluxe operation, which studies an alleged plot to reveal secrets between journalists and police officers in recent years.

Rosario Mohedano has not bitten her tongue either to face her cousin Rocío Carrasco, who has recently pointed out her mother’s entire media family in the docuseries In the name of Rocío. Rosario assures that her cousin is lying in many passages of that testimony, and she categorically denies in this medium that she did not contact Carrasco, as she said on television when they learned of her attempted suicide. The singer admits that they haven’t spoken to each other for a year: “She doesn’t want us in her life, that whoever she loves is by her side,” she says.

As if that were not enough, Mohedano tells us that the next title of his new song will be Phoenix Bird, the same one that Carrasco has tattooed on his back. Rosario’s illusion of relaunching his artistic career is intuited from afar, and this time he doesn’t want anyone to obscure it. He speaks with his head after years of contention, but he sings with his heart.