There are two ways to understand the compilations: the one that simply tries to put the best songs of a band on the same album or the one that tries to turn them into an almost fetishistic object, giving new visions about the group and bringing surprises for regular and new followers hooking methods for non-converts.
There are two ways of understanding discs with an orchestra: that of those who simply (and as Joan Miquel Oliver, composer of Mallorcan Antònia Font) says, are dedicated “to making an acoustic album with four violins behind and that of those who adapt all their songs to a totally different musical language from the one that gave rise to the themes.
Putting both things together, Antònia Font, one of the least obvious groups on the state scene, has decided to go the less beaten path to give birth to the first retrospective of her career. This is how Coser i Cantar was born, an album with many of the group's best songs arranged for the Bratislava Orchestra to perform again.