On this page
TL;DR
Two completely separate things share a search box here. Skool 77 is a Mexican rock-pop band that's been releasing music for decades, and "Gota a Gota" is one of their songs. Skool.com is a US-based SaaS platform for paid online communities, founded by Sam Ovens, charging a flat $99/month per community.
If you're chasing the song, head to YouTube, Spotify, or Apple Music — that's where the catalogue lives. If you accidentally typed "skool" because you've seen it around the creator economy and ended up on this music query, the platform you probably want is skool.com — and the rest of this page covers that quickly.

Start your own Skool community in 60 seconds.
14-day free trial — no card required. Most community owners decide whether Skool fits within the first week.
Skool 77, the Mexican rock-pop band
Skool 77 is a long-running Mexican music project with a fan base that skews nostalgic — songs from the 90s and 2000s era still rotate on Spanish-language playlists. The band's catalogue includes tracks like El Día de Mi Suerte, Loco, Color en la Ciudad, Solo Tú y Yo, and Gota a Gota, plus the well-circulated México track that picks up reaction videos on YouTube.
The Skool 77 brand is unrelated to skool.com. The misspelling overlap is coincidental — the band uses "Skool" stylistically, and skool.com uses it as a domain hack. There's no official Skool 77 community on skool.com that I'm aware of, though fan-run communities for Spanish-language rock do show up across the platform.
If you're a fan creator who runs Skool 77 reaction content or song-breakdown videos and you want a place to monetise that audience, tools4skool can help you grow whichever community you spin up — but more on that later.
"Gota a Gota" — what to know about the track
Gota a Gota (literally "drop by drop") is one of the songs in Skool 77's catalogue that fans search for by name. The phrase is a common Spanish idiom for slow accumulation — a romantic theme typical of the band's songwriting.
For lyrics, official audio, and live versions, the most reliable destinations are:
- The band's official YouTube channel
- Spotify (search "Skool 77")
- Apple Music
- Mexican rock compilation playlists
Lyric sites occasionally host transcriptions, but those vary in quality. If you're trying to pick up the words to sing along, an official audio source is faster than chasing a transcription.
Fans frequently search adjacent terms — Skool 77 letra, Skool 77 reacción, Skool 77 quien te dijo — which is how you ended up here if your initial typo was "skool 77 gota a gota". The pattern is consistent: lyrics, reactions, and song-by-song discovery.
Skool.com — the platform with the same misspelling
Skool.com is a hosted platform for paid online communities. You get a URL like skool.com/<handle> and inside it: a community feed, a Classroom for courses, a Calendar, DMs, gamification (Levels and leaderboard), and Stripe-powered memberships. Pricing is a flat $99/month per community plus Stripe fees on paid memberships.
Sam Ovens founded the platform in 2019; Alex Hormozi joined as a partner in 2023. The product is opinionated — feed-first, course-second, no per-seat charges, no revenue share. That trade-off is a feature for solopreneurs and a constraint for teams.
Where Skool's product is thin is around lifecycle automation: there's no native triggered DM system, no churn-saver flow, no comment lead extraction, no CRM. That's the gap tools4skool fills — a Chrome extension that uses your existing Skool session (never stores your password) and adds DM sequences, churn risk scores, scheduled posts, comment mining, and member CSV export.
If you're a music fan creator thinking about a Skool community
Reaction-video creators, song-breakdown channels, and Spanish-language music podcasters increasingly use skool.com as a fan home base. The hook: members pay $5–$30/month for early access, lyric breakdowns, watch-along livestreams, and creator AMAs.
The friction: once your community grows past 100 paid members, the volume of welcome DMs, churn-recovery messages, and comment replies overwhelms one person. That's where lifecycle tooling earns its money. With tools4skool, you can:
- Trigger a 7-day welcome DM sequence with image attachments when someone joins
- Catch members who stop logging in and send a 60-second "are you good?" recovery DM
- Mine comments for fan emails or DM intent
- Schedule a week of posts in one sitting and click Post Now when something timely drops
Kate Capelli used a similar setup and turned $59/month of tooling into $4,000/month of additional revenue in two weeks — a 7,000% ROI. Music creators with engaged niches see the same dynamics.
Stop leaving DMs, churn, and revenue on the table.
tools4skool plugs the holes Skool ships with. Free plan forever, paid tiers from $29/mo.
Book a demo →Frequently asked
Keep reading
Ready when you are.
Drop your email — we'll loop you in the day access opens.
Book a demo →