Broer's Fairy Tales: How Vaimo Brought His Brothers Together for an Album Built on Family
It started as a big brother's gift to help the middle one break in. What came out was something none of them expected — thirteen songs that sound like home.
Some of the most honest music ever made began with a simple act of loyalty. Vaimo, the Rome-born singer-songwriter who has been building his career in Miami and across Italy since 2018, had a specific idea when he conceived Broer's Fairy Tales: give his middle brother Nik a real entry point into the music industry. Build something together. Put his name on it. Show the world what Nik could do.
What emerged from that intention, released on April 27, 2026 under their collective name Fratelli Broer — Italian for "the brothers" — is one of the more quietly compelling debut albums to land this year. Thirteen songs. Thirty minutes. A project that began as an act of brotherhood and became something much larger than either of them planned.
The Man Behind the Album
To understand Broer's Fairy Tales, you first need to understand Vaimo. He is not a newcomer. Since releasing his first music in 2018, he has built a catalog that spans emotional pop, hip-hop, and singer-songwriter territory — tracks like "Saliremo" featuring Wassup Nick, the introspective "L o n t a n a D a M e," and his 2025 feature "For real," all available on Apple Music. His pen has been recognized at the highest level of the Italian music industry — Vaimo is the recipient of [a prestigious Italian music award] [insert award name here], a distinction that places him among Italy's most respected songwriting voices.
That credential matters here because Broer's Fairy Tales is not a vanity project or a casual experiment. It is a deliberate creative act by a proven artist who chose to invest his reputation, his name, and his craft into lifting someone else up. That someone is his brother Nik.
Nik, Lorenzo, and What Family Sounds Like
The album's construction is democratic in the truest sense. Vaimo and Nik each carry roughly 55 to 65 percent of the creative weight across every track — a genuine split, not a headline artist with a supporting act buried in the credits. You can hear it in the music: there is no single center of gravity pulling everything toward one voice or one ego. The songs breathe the way a conversation between people who grew up together tends to breathe — finishing each other's thoughts, making room, knowing exactly when to step forward and when to step back.
The youngest brother, Lorenzo, steps in for a verse on one song. Even that single contribution carries its own authority. In this family, talent is not concentrated in one place.
The album closes with "Sognavo un c'era una volta" — Italian for I dreamed of once upon a time. It is hard to think of a more precise title for what this entire project is doing. The fairy tale here is not escapism. It is the dream of something built to last, made by people who have known each other their whole lives, released into the world on their own terms under their own independent label, waterboi clique.
Rome to Miami — Where Lavish Comes In
Vaimo's presence in Miami is not incidental to this story. He arrived in the city not as a tourist but as a working artist planting roots — the kind of move that takes conviction and a clear vision of where you are going. His catalog deepened here. His network grew here. And it was here that the connection with Lavish by LauLau was made.
Lavish handles marketing for the Broer's Fairy Tales project — bringing the album into rooms, platforms, and conversations it would have taken far longer to reach independently. The alignment is not accidental. Lavish by LauLau was built at the intersection of Miami energy and Italian soul, and Vaimo — a Roman artist who chose Miami, who made an album for his brothers across the Atlantic — embodies that intersection completely.
"When I understood what this album actually was — not just music, but a big brother using everything he had built to open a door for someone he loves — I knew immediately this belonged in the Lavish universe," says Laura Sylvia, founder of Lavish by LauLau and Editor-in-Chief of LASAI Press. "That is the kind of story we exist to tell."
For more on the Miami creative founders building on their own terms, read our recent feature on Seashell Killa Bikinis — another brand built from conviction and community.
Stream It Now
Broer's Fairy Tales by Fratelli Broer is available now on Apple Music and major streaming platforms. Thirty minutes. Thirteen songs. Made in Rome, carried to Miami, offered to the world.
Follow Vaimo on Instagram at @vaimo999 and on Apple Music for updates on upcoming solo work and future Fratelli Broer releases.
For press, brand partnerships, and booking inquiries, contact info@lavishbylaulau.com.
Broer's Fairy Tales: How Vaimo Brought His Brothers Together for an Album Built on Family
It started as a big brother's gift to help the middle one break in. What came out was something none of them expected — thirteen songs that sound like home.
Some of the most honest music ever made began with a simple act of loyalty. Vaimo, the Rome-born singer-songwriter who has been building his career in Miami and across Italy since 2018, had a specific idea when he conceived Broer's Fairy Tales: give his middle brother Nik a real entry point into the music industry. Build something together. Put his name on it. Show the world what Nik could do.
What emerged from that intention, released on April 27, 2026 under their collective name Fratelli Broer — Italian for "the brothers" — is one of the more quietly compelling debut albums to land this year. Thirteen songs. Thirty minutes. A project that began as an act of brotherhood and became something much larger than either of them planned.
The Man Behind the Album
To understand Broer's Fairy Tales, you first need to understand Vaimo. He is not a newcomer. Since releasing his first music in 2018, he has built a catalog that spans emotional pop, hip-hop, and singer-songwriter territory — tracks like "Saliremo" featuring Wassup Nick, the introspective "L o n t a n a D a M e," and his 2025 feature "For real," all available on Apple Music. His pen has been recognized at the highest level of the Italian music industry — Vaimo is the recipient of [a prestigious Italian music award] [insert award name here], a distinction that places him among Italy's most respected songwriting voices.
That credential matters here because Broer's Fairy Tales is not a vanity project or a casual experiment. It is a deliberate creative act by a proven artist who chose to invest his reputation, his name, and his craft into lifting someone else up. That someone is his brother Nik.
Nik, Lorenzo, and What Family Sounds Like
The album's construction is democratic in the truest sense. Vaimo and Nik each carry roughly 55 to 65 percent of the creative weight across every track — a genuine split, not a headline artist with a supporting act buried in the credits. You can hear it in the music: there is no single center of gravity pulling everything toward one voice or one ego. The songs breathe the way a conversation between people who grew up together tends to breathe — finishing each other's thoughts, making room, knowing exactly when to step forward and when to step back.
The youngest brother, Lorenzo, steps in for a verse on one song. Even that single contribution carries its own authority. In this family, talent is not concentrated in one place.
The album closes with "Sognavo un c'era una volta" — Italian for I dreamed of once upon a time. It is hard to think of a more precise title for what this entire project is doing. The fairy tale here is not escapism. It is the dream of something built to last, made by people who have known each other their whole lives, released into the world on their own terms under their own independent label, waterboi clique.
Rome to Miami — Where Lavish Comes In
Vaimo's presence in Miami is not incidental to this story. He arrived in the city not as a tourist but as a working artist planting roots — the kind of move that takes conviction and a clear vision of where you are going. His catalog deepened here. His network grew here. And it was here that the connection with Lavish by LauLau was made.
Lavish handles marketing for the Broer's Fairy Tales project — bringing the album into rooms, platforms, and conversations it would have taken far longer to reach independently. The alignment is not accidental. Lavish by LauLau was built at the intersection of Miami energy and Italian soul, and Vaimo — a Roman artist who chose Miami, who made an album for his brothers across the Atlantic — embodies that intersection completely.
"When I understood what this album actually was — not just music, but a big brother using everything he had built to open a door for someone he loves — I knew immediately this belonged in the Lavish universe," says Laura Sylvia, founder of Lavish by LauLau and Editor-in-Chief of LASAI Press. "That is the kind of story we exist to tell."
For more on the Miami creative founders building on their own terms, read our recent feature on Seashell Killa Bikinis — another brand built from conviction and community.
Stream It Now
Broer's Fairy Tales by Fratelli Broer is available now on Apple Music and major streaming platforms. Thirty minutes. Thirteen songs. Made in Rome, carried to Miami, offered to the world.
Follow Vaimo on Instagram at @vaimo999 and on Apple Music for updates on upcoming solo work and future Fratelli Broer releases.
For press, brand partnerships, and booking inquiries, contact info@lavishbylaulau.com.
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