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Li-sa-X is a Japanese female Guitarist/Composer who was born in 2005. Her cover video of RACER X's "Scarified," which she posted when she was 8 years old, garnered more than 5 million views and attracted a lot of worldwide attention. After watching this video, the composer of the song Paul Gilbert (MR. BIG) invited her to join his online guitar school as a scholarship student. She made her professional debut at the age of 12. Her playing technique has been described as “the future of rock."

Santaflow is an artist, composer, producer, entrepreneur, teacher and showman, politically incorrect and with millions of followers around the world (mainly in Spanish-speaking countries). After more than 20 years of career, he feels fitter and more eager than ever to continue creating songs and making them sound better every day. A restless lover of the world of sound, he works with several of the leading brands in the sector.
June 17, 2021

Songwriter, composer, producer, recording engineer
When I was 20 I started listening to Drum n' Bass and it got me really interested in how it was made. I bought my first drum machine and sampler soon after and slowly progressed into other instruments.
Hearing Boards of Canada's "BOC Maxima" for the first time was definitely an awakening. Their sound along with the emotion of Ulrich Schnauss' compositions served as the foundation I built from as a musician starting out.
I think it's always difficult to find ways to evolve and change and to stay inspired as an artist. For me changing up the process and tools helps keep me interested. Every phase of my evolution has been defined by one mode of operation or another and I'm always trying to iterate on that. I think overall I wish I had stayed more organized and focused at times, I tend to get overwhelmed by things when I get deeper into the process of creating an album and it's kind of that "stitch in time" thing where a little bit of attention and organization early on would have saved me a ton of headache later.
The Minimoog Model D, Fender Precision Bass and Gibson Les Paul have always been my kind of desert island instruments. Lately I've really been getting into FX pedals. I was always into outboard FX but there's so much more interesting and innovative stuff going on in the pedal world these days than the old rackmount stuff I was used to.
Time and pressure. Nothing comes easy and it takes focus and determination over many years to even approach a mastery of your craft. If you put in the time and energy it will always come back to you several fold.
Since the very beginning headphones have been a huge part of my process. Early on it was just out of necessity, having roommates, not being able to afford proper monitoring, etc. But over time I realized there's a level of detail and focus that can be applied to the music when using headphones as your primary monitors. I think now that has found its way into my sound and I'm always looking to create compositions that open up and reveal a deeper dimension when experienced on headphones.
The LCD-X are the first headphones I've found with the accuracy, low frequency response and soundstage to truly replace a studio monitoring environment. They have allowed me a great deal of freedom to work wherever I please and have led to better mixes in general. Even in my treated mixing room I find myself reaching for them as my primary monitoring source.