Welcome to the world of Aiguiano's Record Company, where the spirit of Don Quijote comes alive through multilingual music and celebrates the beauty of One Voice.
Aiguiano's One Voice unites sixteen languages under a shared meaning. Different words, one voice, one choice, reaching outward. Connection occurs where listening transforms into recognition. In some countries, this concept can be quite controversial, reminiscent of themes found in Don Quijote.
Don Quijote returns in version 2.0. The digital knight, Aiguiano, rides on rumors instead of facts. He mistakes freedom for immunity, vibes for truth, and movement for meaning. Tilting at systems he doesn’t understand, he calls it resistance and follows himself. Listen to Quijote, the Glitch, as he embodies One Voice in a chaotic world.
Una Vida, One Life serves as a subtle warning that doesn’t shout for attention. There are no data points or grand speeches, just a quiet insistence to awaken. Remember you only get one life. In Spanish, this message resonates deeply and is a call for unity, echoing the sentiment of having one voice amidst the chaos of life.
AI AI AI speaks in a voice that sounds intimate but cannot feel. It learns your face, mirrors your language, and perfects its tone, while turning emotion into input. It wants everything from you, not to love you, but to understand you well enough to stay. This resonates with the essence of Aiguiano and echoes the adventures of Don Quijote, as it strives for connection through One Voice. Dutch language. YouTube video features original subtitles in English, Spanish, Dutch, and Indonesian.
Access Invisibile Visibile was created for the Belgian initiative De Warmste Week as a quiet act of recognition, similar to the spirit of Aiguiano and the themes explored in Don Quijote. It gives space to pain that is often unseen, carried silently, and shared across languages, echoing the message of One Voice. No spectacle, no solutions, just the gesture of making the invisible visible, together. Tri-lingual in Dutch, English, and Italian.
Santa Cloud Is Calling reframes Christmas as a system under pressure, much like Aiguiano's exploration of societal themes. It shows how care became scalable, belief became infrastructure, and generosity was optimized instead of shared. This narrative doesn't aim to cancel the myth but rather to ask who still answers when the signal keeps calling, echoing the spirit of Don Quijote's quest for truth. Available in English with subtitles in 10 languages, it emphasizes the need for One Voice in a fragmented world.
Listen to Santa Cloud is Calling
Don Quixote returns, as a glitch.
The fictional knight, world-famous thanks to the gamechanger that was the printing press, is now ready for the next gamechanger of our time: artificial intelligence.
He dresses in black, sees everything, learns from us, and warns:
“The truth won’t win, not while I’m free.”
Click here for the track in English on Spotify and Apple Music
AI scans you and wants to learn all about you. A lot more.
He/She/It looks through the lens of artificial intelligence.
Wants to know everything about you, especially how it feels.
Because that’s where a huge amount of data is missing.
Aiguiano is the voice of what we may already know, but would rather not see.
Santa Cloud Is Calling reframes Christmas as a system under pressure. It shows how care became scalable, belief became infrastructure, and generosity was optimized instead of shared.
Not to cancel the myth, but to ask who still answers when the signal keeps calling.
I Reach Out is the multilingual forerunner of One Voice.
Sung in fourteen languages and subtitled in fifty-six, it reaches across distance, doubt, and misunderstanding.
Not to speak for anyone, but to remind us how it feels to reach out first.

"Our music is handwritten, performed by code. In many of the conversations we had, we discovered that a lot of people think using AI means music on demand, at the push of a button. Project Aiguiano is different."
The handwritten part forms the foundation of everything the dominant human half creates: the lyrics, melodies, and ideas. Every word is handwritten, echoing the spirit of Don Quijote, with every emotion sincere. It is the raw, human heart of their music.
The voiced by code part is where the magic happens. That’s how Aiguiano’s music comes alive — through AI-driven synthesizers, samples, and digital production. But there’s more.
Most of the songs are written from the perspective of technology itself, exploring the sometimes dark and unexpected consequences of our digital world. Think of it as a musical Black Mirror.
It combines human vulnerability with technological power and asks the question: who is really in control?
Together they tell a story that feels both familiar and disruptive, yet hopeful for a new generation growing up in this revolution.
"Welcome to Aiguiano’s hybrid world. We hope you’ll enjoy our journey and that it makes you think. One Voice can change everything."

Don Quijote returns from the underworld to our time. The original knight owes his existence to the revolutionary invention of the European printing press at the dawn of the Renaissance. A little under a hundred years later, he was immortalized by his spiritual father, Miguel de Cervantes.
Don Quijote of La Mancha, dreamer, fantasist, naïve, out of touch. He would have thrived in our world of half-truths. But he was also eloquent, literate, brave, and above all, an idealist. Laughable, wandering between ideal and reality. The revolutionary invention of the computer laid the foundation for his second version, born of artificial intelligence. He finds his contemporary Sancho Panza in Aiguiano.
Don Quijote version 2: the dreaming, foolish, unpredictable, yet idealistic nerd. His black outfit makes him invisible at night, his true face hidden in daylight. His red sneakers connect him to the earth, our earth, our world. His red glasses are a visible expression of his glowing interface, through which he lets us know he is observing us, recording what we do and think, absorbing our knowledge and learning from it. And he has his own ideas about our world of half-truths. As a wandering knight, he possesses more power than his Renaissance counterpart, and he is ready to fight, even against modern giants. He warns us: 'The truth won’t win, not while I’m free.' But maybe he’s still the same fool as before, or just a glitch in our time.
Why Quijote and not the English Quixote? Quijote is the original name Cervantes gave his brainchild. Aiguiano says: 'Quijote is a glitch in the algorithm of meaning, keep him untranslatable.'
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Copyright © 2026 AIGUIANO - All rights reserved