Bruno Brocchi writes songs the way most people keep journals. Born in Brazil and shaped by years bouncing between the US, Switzerland, Spain, and now Texas, the rock songwriter has built a career on turning life on the move into music that sticks.
His catalogue spans eight albums, and the numbers show people are listening. Tracks like “Not Anymore” have pulled in over 170,000 streams, while “Good Love Gone Bad” sits comfortably above 129,000. It’s the kind of steady growth that comes from consistency and dedication to creating music that connects with listeners.
Brocchi’s sound sits somewhere between classic rock storytelling and modern pop-rock energy. There are echoes of Springsteen’s open-road anthems and Bon Jovi’s heart-on-sleeve delivery, but the voice is his own. He writes about relationships, freedom, dreams that don’t always pan out, and the restlessness that comes with living out of a suitcase.
His latest track, “Underground Love,” leans hard into 80s nostalgia without feeling like a costume. Think Tom Petty’s guitar warmth mixed with Ryan Adams’ reflective edge. The production layers bass, drums, keys, and both electric and acoustic guitars into something that feels full but never cluttered. Lyrically, it digs into the mess of searching for something real when the world keeps serving up disappointment. It’s about wanting love that doesn’t come with conditions or expiration dates.
The song was recorded in Brazil and Spain, then mastered at Abbey Road by Sean Magee, the engineer behind Rush, Iron Maiden, and The Beatles. That level of polish gives the track weight, but it never loses the rawness that makes Brocchi’s writing work.
Now based in Texas after a brief stop in Brussels, Brocchi is gearing up for more acoustic shows and continuing to add to a catalogue that already speaks for itself. For an artist whose life has been defined by movement, standing still was never really an option.
