Feel the beat, feel the dilemma. In “Te Necesito”, Argentine hit-maker KHEA teams up with rising star María Becerra to turn a roller-coaster romance into a reggaeton confession booth. Both voices trade lines drenched in late-night anxiety: “Me está matando la ansiedad… vives dentro de mi cabeza”. They desperately crave each other yet admit the relationship might be more poison than potion, a love that “está por matarme.”
Push, pull, repeat. One moment they promise to forget, the next they fantasize about dancing “pegaditos contra la pared.” Friends, missed calls, and shots of alcohol all swirl around a single truth – neither can truly let go. The song captures that familiar tug-of-war between passion and self-preservation, wrapping raw emotion in a beat that makes you move even while your heart aches. So hit play and get ready to dance your feelings out, just like KHEA and María do. They need each other, and—if the hook gets you—you might just need this track too.
Te Vas is a raw, Latin-trap confession where Argentine star KHEA and Colombian crooner Sebastián Yatra unpack the emotional chaos that follows a breakup. Although both lovers agreed parting was “lo mejor para los dos,” the moment she walks away the sad songs rush back in. The singers swap memories of smoky bedrooms, borrowed T-shirts and sleepless nights filled with excuses for curious friends. Every line pulls at the tug-of-war between pride and vulnerability: they smile in public, cry in private and insist that seeing them with someone new “no significa que a ella la quiera.”
Beneath the urban beat, the track explores the paradox of love that ends yet refuses to disappear. They admit the relationship was exhausting with jealousy, distance and fear, but “te vas y me haces falta” still echoes like a stubborn refrain. Holding on to a cap, a smile or even an entire city, the singers reveal that moving on is more about acting tough than feeling healed. Te Vas ultimately reminds us that sometimes the only thing harder than staying together is pretending the goodbye really worked.
Loca Remix ignites a neon-soaked night where screens and streets blur together. KHEA introduces a fearless woman who bombards his Snapchat with steamy videos, impatient for him to drop everything and satisfy her cravings. Her boldness, fueled by codeine, weed, and throbbing trap beats, turns lust into an adrenaline sport: bedrooms catch fire, balconies become playgrounds, and every whispered promise is more daring than the last.
Bad Bunny, Duki, and Cazzu add their own swagger, tossing in Caribbean flow, Argentine slang, and unapologetic bragging about their sexual prowess. Each verse celebrates instant chemistry and a no-strings rulebook where desire outweighs romance, and excitement trumps consequence. In short, the track is an unfiltered ode to modern hedonism—snap, text, pull up, repeat—capturing the thrill of living (and loving) on impulse.
Imagine you are relaxing with smoke swirling when your phone lights up and vibrates - it is your ex. That is the cinematic opener of “Ayer Me Llamó Mi Ex.” Over a moody Trap beat spiced with Lenny Santos’s bachata-flavored guitar, KHEA shares that his former flame is already bored with her new guy and hungry for the spark they once ignited. He tries to act tough, yet admits he still replays their wild videos and remembers how their arguments always melted into steamy make-ups. The hook rings like an unanswered call, reminding us that some contacts are impossible to delete.
The song dives into a love-hate loop where passion heals and hurts at the same time. She wants to come back, he is tempted, but only on his terms - no talk of romance, just desire. It is a candid snapshot of that messy middle ground between nostalgia and self-protection, making listeners nod to the rhythm while secretly wondering, “Would I pick up that call?”
“Vete” is KHEA’s fiery goodbye letter to a lover who broke his trust. The Argentine trap star starts by admitting that he was the one who fell hard, forgave, and still got let down. Tired of the cycle, he repeats a blunt invitation: “Si querés, vete” – “If you want, leave.” What follows is a victory-lap montage: globe-trotting trips to Paris and Madrid, late-night parties, wads of cash, and a phone that never stops buzzing. Each flex is a reminder that he has swapped heartbreak for self-love and success.
Under the swagger, there is a relatable twist of revenge. KHEA pictures his face “por todos lados” (everywhere) so his ex can’t escape the sight of what she lost. The song flips from regret to empowerment, from “I was the crazy one” to “now you’re the one going crazy.” In short, “Vete” turns post-breakup pain into a soundtrack for moving on, leveling up, and never looking back.
“Dónde Estás” is a late-night confession set to a hypnotic trap beat. Argentine star KHEA slips into the shoes of someone who wrecked his own romance and now tries to numb the guilt with molly y cerveza. Between the thump of the club and the glow of a phone screen, he scrolls her stories and repeats the burning question: ¿Dónde estás? His search turns the city into a maze of memories where FOMO, jealousy and regret collide.
Owning up to being “el que mató” the relationship, he flips between swagger and vulnerability, begging for one more shot at what they “once were.” Mixing substances with flashbacks, he realizes that every wild night just circles back to her. The track is a raw, catchy postcard from the edge of remorse, filled with slang about nightlife, social media and second chances—a perfect playground for learning colloquial Spanish and the language of love gone wrong.
Almas Gemelas (Spanish for Soulmates) paints a vivid picture of two lovers who feel destined for each other, fusing streetwise swagger with heartfelt devotion. KHEA, one of Argentina's leading trap voices, celebrates a relationship where friendship and passion collide—she is his mejor amiga and the spark that keeps his life spinning. Throughout the song he pledges loyalty, showering her with luxury brands, late-night rides, and flirtatious texts, all while declaring that no one will love her the way he does. The lyrics mix playful boasts with steamy imagery, highlighting how their connection is as intense in private as it is unbreakable in public.
Beneath the flashy cars, designer labels, and club-ready beats, the core message is simple: when two souls click, they become inseparable teammates in love, lust, and life. KHEA’s confident flow turns everyday couple moments—sending selfies, choosing outfits, sharing inside jokes—into proof that they truly are almas gemelas. It is a high-energy testament to modern romance, where loyalty and chemistry rule the night.
Loca plunges us into a steamy night on the streets of Buenos Aires, where instant messages ignite instant chemistry. The song tells the story of a woman who is crazy in love and lust—she bombards the singer’s Snapchat with provocative videos, begging him to come over right now. Fueled by shots of Jäger, flashing club lights, and a dash of risky behavior, both lovers surrender to an electric attraction they can’t (and won’t) resist.
Beneath the pulsating beat, KHEA, Duki, and Cazzu paint a picture of modern passion: urgent, obsessive, and completely dominated by the thrill of the moment. From fierce declarations of desire to playful power games in the bedroom, Loca captures that intoxicating mix of pleasure, danger, and ego that sparks when two people decide the night belongs to them—and only them.
“Oreo De Fresa” drops you straight into the whirlwind romance of two total opposites: she shines with angelic light, while he embraces his inner demon. For KHEA, this clash is electric. He tells us he treasures her more than cash, fame, or casual hookups, guarding her kisses like treasure in a safe. Their love is so fierce it flips between devotion and destructive passion, and the rapper paints that tension with vivid images of jealousy, protection, and raw intimacy.
The sugary title is no accident. Comparing her to a strawberry-flavored Oreo, KHEA turns a playful snack into a symbol of irresistible temptation. The lyrics burst with explicit desire, but underneath the heat you catch a deeper admission: he cannot let her go, no matter how toxic the cycle gets. Violence and vulnerability, sweetness and sin, loyalty and lust all collide in this Argentine trap anthem, revealing a love that tastes as good as it hurts.
COMO YO TE QUIERO [DELUXE] is a vibrant love declaration where KHEA and Ana Mena paint romance with every possible color. The singers promise grand gestures—from circling the globe to serving breakfast in bed—to show that their partner sits at the very top of their priority list. Behind the flashy pledges, though, the lyrics open up about real-life insecurities: mood swings, doubts, and the worry that intense love can sometimes hurt. By admitting these flaws, the duo makes the devotion feel more genuine and relatable.
At its core, the track celebrates a bond so strong that outside opinions simply fade away. The lovers complete each other like the final piece of a puzzle, and even their arguments turn into playful sparks that keep the relationship alive. Mixing Argentine urban flair with Spanish pop sweetness, KHEA and Ana Mena create an anthem for anyone who has ever felt that one-of-a-kind connection that nobody else can understand.
“VIBEZ” es un retrato sincero de ese amor que atrae y repele al mismo tiempo. KHEA y Awesome Pierre cantan sobre una relación que se ha vuelto un bucle de discusiones, orgullo y reconciliaciones. El narrador quiere alejarse porque la conexión lo consume, pero al mismo tiempo le resulta imposible cortar el hilo que lo une a su pareja. Entre frases como “Me quiero alejar, pero no sé, no te puedo dejar” y “Estoy mejor solo, solo son vibes”, descubrimos la tensión entre el deseo de libertad y la fuerza de los recuerdos compartidos.
El tema mezcla vulnerabilidad y frescura, envolviendo sentimientos confusos en un ritmo urbano pegadizo. Hay momentos de fría resignación -“Tenemos que hablar”-, seguidos de guiños de esperanza -“Solo quiero todo si es contigo”-. Al final, el protagonista acepta que por ahora prefiere la soledad, disculpándose con un “Sorry, mi amor, esto no es personal”. En pocas palabras, “VIBEZ” captura esa montaña rusa emocional donde el corazón y la mente chocan, y donde, aunque duele soltar, a veces la mejor vibra es dejar ir.
“EFECTO” is KHEA’s electrifying confession of how love can flip your world upside-down in the best possible way. From the moment he sees his partner wearing his remera (T-shirt), the Argentine trap star paints an intimate picture of passion, comparing his touch to Picasso sketching icy lines on skin. The chorus bursts with urgency: he feels a magnetic efecto that keeps him thinking about her all day, skipping hangouts with friends, and craving another rendezvous that will shoot them straight “hasta el cielo.”
Underneath the steamy imagery lies a vulnerable heart that’s terrified of losing something so “genuino.” KHEA admits he’s enloqueciendo—going crazy—because this relationship makes everything feel perfect and different from anything he’s known before. The song blends playful sensuality with authentic emotion, turning a late-night hookup into a declaration that destiny has finally delivered the one person who makes him feel truly suficiente. Get ready for a track that’s as catchy as it is heartfelt, capturing the head-spinning rush of love’s irresistible effect.
Se Motiva spins the story of a romance that’s burning out faster than a club strobe light. KHEA and JD Pantoja trade verses about a girl who seems to turn up whenever there’s drama: the more they argue, the more she “gets motivated,” shining like a diva in the heat of the fight. What began as a ride-or-die commitment now feels like a never-ending telenovela, filled with jealousy, tears, and blame-shifting. The guys admit they once put “everything in the basket,” but her constant need for conflict has drained their attention and affection.
Behind the catchy reggaetón-trap beat, the lyrics capture that bittersweet moment when love morphs into exhaustion. Instead of begging for a restart, the narrators accept that the magic is gone and decide to walk away before more damage is done. Se Motiva is both a dance-floor banger and a relatable cautionary tale: sometimes the loudest sparks in a relationship are really warning flares telling you it’s time to let go.