"VAGABUNDO" sees Sebastián Yatra teaming up with fellow Colombians Manuel Turizo and Beéle for a sun-soaked urbano jam that feels like a never-ending night out. Between the playful "na-na-na" chants, the trio brag about bar-hopping, downing drinks, and living like carefree drifters who answer to no one.
Listen a little closer, though, and the beat reveals a bittersweet confession. Every party, tattoo, and swaggering pose is just a failed attempt to erase an unforgettable love. No buzz is strong enough to fill the “vacío que nadie va a llenar” – the emptiness left behind when the right person walks away. Catchy yet vulnerable, the song reminds us that even the wildest escapades can’t drown out a broken heart that still wants to dance.
"Pareja Del Año" is a day-dreaming love story wrapped in a smooth reggaeton beat. Sebastián Yatra, joined by Puerto Rican rapper Myke Towers, imagines borrowing a girl’s heart for just 24 hours. In that single, stolen day he swears they would be the couple everyone talks about – sharing kisses, breaking routines, and turning every moment into a music-video fantasy.
But the rhythm hides a bittersweet twist: the girl is already with someone else, and both singers know it. Their verses bounce between bold confidence (promising unforgettable nights) and raw vulnerability (jealousy, late-night tears, replaying old videos). Friends warned them it would hurt, yet the pull of forbidden love is stronger than reason. The song becomes an anthem for anyone who has ever asked “What would happen if…?” while dancing through the tension of desire and heartbreak.
Colombian pop star Sebastián Yatra turns love into pure adrenaline in “Energía Bacana”. The lyrics compare his partner’s presence to a natural high: he says he has never smoked marijuana, yet her vibe lifts him higher than any substance could. Each kiss sends a rush to his head, melts away stress like an ice-cold beer, and turns an ordinary week into a never-ending Saturday. The repeated phrase energía bacana means "cool, awesome energy", highlighting how her positive spirit brightens every moment.
Beyond the playful metaphors, the song celebrates a relationship built on friendship, trust, and zero drama. Yatra admires her inner and outer beauty, praises the sisterhood she keeps around her, and feels blessed - "das ganas de darse la bendición" - to have her by his side. With Colombian slang like chimba ("awesome") and catchy pop beats, the track radiates gratitude: life was already good, but with her, he sings, "ya todo estaba bien y ahora estoy mejor" - everything was fine and now I am better. It is a feel-good anthem that reminds listeners how the right person can boost your mood, quiet your worries, and make you feel like you can touch the sky.
“Tacones Rojos” is Sebastián Yatra’s radiant love story set to an irresistible Urbano beat. A sudden ray of light slipping through the window becomes the symbol of a woman who brightens his world. She struts in striking red heels, dances reggaetón with effortless charm and, with a single kiss, lifts him from heartache to weightless joy. Yatra affectionately calls her “mi pedazo de sol”—my piece of sun—because her presence heals old wounds and makes him feel as lucky as if he had just won the lottery.
Yet this sunshine comes with a playful storm. The girl has “a collection of broken hearts,” and loving her means laughing, crying and even suffering a little, but he cannot stop. That mix of sweetness and risk is what makes the Colombian singer’s emotions soar. From a casual meeting in a bar to imagining a life together back in Colombia, the song captures the exhilarating moment when unexpected chemistry turns everyday life into a celebration. “Tacones Rojos” is a musical reminder that real love can arrive unannounced, sweep us onto the dance floor and paint everything in brighter color—especially when those colors include a dazzling pair of red heels.
Un Año is a heartfelt pop duet that turns the calendar into a love story. From the first glance in primavera to a painful goodbye in septiembre, Sebastián Yatra and Reik walk us through the seasons, showing how each month carries a new emotion. The lyrics feel like flipping through a scrapbook: bright summer memories, chilly autumn farewells, and the hopeful promise of flowers in febrero. Every verse is a postcard from a long-distance relationship where dates on the clock matter less than the feelings that survive them.
At its core, the song shouts a simple truth: el amor es más fuerte—love is stronger. No matter how many months or kilometers stand between the two lovers, they refuse to let time win. Friends get updated, family learns the beloved’s last name, and the singer keeps counting down the days until reunion. “Un Año” reminds us that patience can be romantic and that waiting is easier when each page of the calendar is filled with unwavering hope.
“Cómo Mirarte” is Sebastián Yatra’s heartfelt confession of a love so intense that words feel useless. Each verse paints the rush of emotions that hit him whenever he sees the person he loves: summer warmth even when it’s winter, time stretching into forever, destiny itself seeming to interfere. He watches her smile, gets lost in her eyes, and fights the frustration of knowing she isn’t his – yet.
Rather than accepting fate’s obstacles, the Colombian pop star vows to wait, convinced that true love can outlast distance, months apart, and even destiny’s plot twists. The song blends vulnerability with optimism, turning personal longing into a universal anthem for anyone who has ever believed that a connection this deep is worth every second of patience.
Traicionera takes us straight into the whirlwind of a love-hate dance. Colombian pop star Sebastián Yatra describes a captivating woman who collects broken hearts like souvenirs. The narrator feels the magnetic pull of her reggaetón moves, yet he keeps his guard up because her only mission seems to be making lovers “die of love.” Every time she says “te amo,” he rolls his eyes; he already knows she is a mentirosa (liar) who enjoys the chase more than the commitment.
Despite the upbeat rhythm and club-ready beat, the song is really a warning label for anyone tempted by flashy charm. Yatra flips the usual love song script by refusing to fall for false promises. He calls her “pasajera” – just a temporary passenger in his life – and vows that her betrayal will not sink him. The result is a catchy anthem that lets you dance, sing, and learn a few Spanish words about trust, heartbreak, and self-respect all at once.
“No Hay Nadie Más” is Sebastián Yatra’s pop-soaked love letter to the person who turned his world upside down in the best possible way. With every line he revisits that first magical kiss, marvels at a gaze that defies explanation, and admits he is hopelessly smitten with her unique mix of tenderness and playful jealousy. Her arrival swept away sadness and opened a space where laughter and purpose thrive, making it clear that life simply makes more sense when she is around.
Riding a soaring melody, Yatra pledges to guard her at night, love her without blame, and miss her through storms and solitude alike. Even when “mil razones para renunciar” appear, the chorus thunders his unwavering verdict: “No hay nadie más.” The song becomes an anthem of steadfast devotion, inviting listeners to relive their own unforgettable first loves and to believe that, when the heart knows, there truly is nobody else.
“Quererte Bonito” is a sparkling love confession where Colombian singer Sebastián Yatra and Venezuelan-American songwriter ELENA ROSE celebrate the kind of romance that feels effortless. Running on only “tres horas de sueño,” the narrator is still bursting with energy because love has frozen time and muted every worry. The lyrics paint a picture of two people who turn each other’s chaos into calm; even when life feels like a crash, the other person shows up “con un ángel a salvarme,” making tears flow from pure happiness instead of pain.
At its heart, the song repeats one simple truth: “Se hace tan natural quererte bonito.” Loving this person is automatic, addictive, and indispensable. Yatra and ELENA ROSE trade verses that describe love as a glowing force that lights up morning after morning, turning need into their only “debilidad.” It is a joyful surrender, an admission of madness, and an anthem for anyone who has ever felt reborn by someone else’s light.
“Dos Oruguitas” by Colombian singer Sebastián Yatra wraps a tender love story inside the gentle flutter of two little caterpillars. These oruguitas cling to each other through nights, dawns, and a world that keeps shifting under their tiny feet. Their embrace feels eternal, yet nature quietly nudges them toward change: to spin separate cocoons, to trust the unknown, and to bloom into something brighter. The song’s sweet melody mirrors this bittersweet moment, reminding us that sometimes the bravest act of love is letting go so both souls can grow.
Halfway through, the lyrics weave into the world of Encanto, revealing family wounds, heartfelt apologies, and the power of forgiveness. The caterpillars’ metamorphosis becomes a mirror for the Madrigal family’s journey: miracles appear, chrysalis walls break, and new wings unfold when each person faces change with courage and hope. In just a few verses, “Dos Oruguitas” transforms from a simple nature tale into a soaring anthem about growth, resilience, and the magical future that awaits when we allow ourselves to fly.
Sebastián Yatra’s “Quiero Decirte” is a heartfelt confession where the Colombian singer gathers the courage to voice a love he once thought impossible. Surrounded by admirers of the same person, he wonders how to love her differently, and how to stand out when “so many people already love you.” The lyrics flash back to lonely, cold dawns, then burst into color when she arrives, turning every night into morning. His refrain “Quiero decirte...” shows a man wrestling with words, admitting that even the strongest phrases feel too small for what he feels.
The chorus line “te amo más que a nada” is the song’s beating heart: a promise that love is deepest when it can be seen in someone’s eyes, not just heard in their voice. Yatra blends vulnerability (fear of being just another admirer) with devotion (swearing to cherish her for life), crafting an anthem for anyone who has struggled to fit giant feelings into simple sentences. Warm Latin rhythms mirror the journey from emptiness to wholeness, inviting listeners to believe that the right person can fill even life’s biggest silences.
Milagro finds Colombian singer Sebastián Yatra marveling at a love that finally arrives after a long, suspense-filled wait. Throughout the track he playfully scolds his partner with the recurring question “¿Por qué te demoraste tanto?” while admitting that he always believed their reunion was written in the stars. The mysterious clock reading 3:33 pops up like a wink from the universe, convincing him that what others call a milagro (miracle) was really just an improbable moment he chose to fight for. Yatra balances swagger and tenderness: he is sure there will never be nadie como yo para ti yet he also thanks her for showing up “sin avisar.”
The song’s heart beats with equal parts gratitude, relief, and hopeful curiosity. Now that destiny has finally caught up, both lovers agree to give their feelings a fair chance, even if they are still unsure whether this is “el amor de mi vida.” Yatra’s message is clear: sometimes you have to nudge fate, trust the small cosmic signs, and keep believing while time does its work. Milagro ultimately invites listeners to smile at the future, because the perfect person can arrive at the most unexpected moment and turn lingering doubt into a joyful new beginning.
“Amor Pasajero” is Sebastian Yatra’s bittersweet toast to a love that burned bright then vanished in a flash. The Colombian singer steps into the story as a heart-struck narrator who discovers his “jeva” is already with someone else. Shock turns into a cocktail of anger, alcohol and tears, so he retreats to the same familiar bar, glass in hand, trying to drown the memory. The catchy rhythm may invite you to dance, yet the lyrics reveal a vulnerable side where laughter and pain collide, showing how easy it is to mask heartache behind a party face.
Still, Yatra’s message carries a spark of resilience. Between shots and cigarette smoke, he reminds himself that the world is full of “más estrellas.” Deleting his ex from his phone, he dreams of meeting someone who truly knows how to love and “me lo haga mejor” in every sense. The song celebrates that turning point when you decide to stop clinging to a passing romance and open your eyes to brighter possibilities. Dance, sing and learn the Spanish slang along the way while Yatra turns heartbreak into an anthem of moving on.
Por Perro is a catchy pop-urban confession where Sebastián Yatra teams up with Luis Figueroa and Lary Over to turn heartbreak into a sing-along. Behind the irresistible beat, the singers admit they are “hecho mierda” without their exes, yet they keep putting on a show of confidence. From Monday to Thursday they fake a smile, but once the weekend hits, the loneliness crashes in, the Moët flows, and every buzz of the phone feels like it might be her calling. The hook, “Yo por perro me lo busqué,” literally means “I brought this on myself for being a dog,” and sums up their regret for having played around until they lost the person they actually loved.
Instead of moving on, the guys dive into parties, bragging, and late-night drunken calls that only deepen the ache. The lyrics blend vulnerability and macho swagger, painting a relatable picture: trying to look cool on the dance floor while secretly checking the screen for a message that never comes. With its smooth vocals, reggaetón beats, and playful Spanish slang, the song teaches a simple lesson — sometimes the biggest punishment for bad behavior is realizing what you threw away, and no amount of partying can fill that empty space.
It’s 2 AM, the club lights have faded, and Sebastián Yatra’s phone is practically burning a hole in his pocket. The song plunges us into that dangerous hour when tequila blurs good intentions and deleted numbers magically reappear. Yatra admits he has erased his lover from his contacts, yet with every sip the urge to hit dial grows stronger. Over a sultry reggaetón beat he paints the picture: empty streets, fogged-up car windows, seats pushed back, and one urgent question: "Where are you right now?" It is a raw portrait of late-night vulnerability, the mix of nostalgia, desire, and bad decisions many people recognize all too well.
Enter Bad Gyal with confident swagger, flipping the script. She knows her worth, teases his boredom with "nice girls," and reminds him that no one does it quite like her. Together they turn the early-morning call into a duet of temptation: he pleads for closeness, she dares him to prove it. Beneath the flirtation lies a relatable idea: we often chase what we should leave behind, especially when the world is quiet and our feelings are loud. “2AM” bottles that razor-thin line between love and impulse, making it the perfect soundtrack for anyone who has ever stared at their screen and wondered if they should press send.
TBT is a vibrant reggaeton throwback to a love that simply refuses to stay in the past. Sebastián Yatra, Rauw Alejandro, and Manuel Turizo sing from the point of view of a man who is done pretending to be “just friends.” He knows his ex is dating someone new, yet her mind keeps wandering back to him every time she kisses the other guy. With playful references to social-media acronyms (TBT, TNT, BCC, ATT), the track urges her to turn the current, unsatisfying relationship into nothing more than a nostalgic Throwback Thursday post.
The chorus becomes an irresistible invitation: “Atrévete, vete, conviértelo en un TBT” – Dare to leave him, make it a TBT. The singers blend seduction and sincerity, confessing that Cupid struck them hard and they cannot move on. They promise passion, sleepless nights, and a rekindling of the chemistry that once “exploded” like dynamite. Under the catchy beat lies a clear message: why settle for a love you can’t fully feel when the real spark is still alive elsewhere?
“Cristina” is a duet that feels like reading the pages of a summer-love diary. Sebastián Yatra and TINI paint the moment two strangers lock eyes in a crowd, trade names, and seal their hello with a kiss. He is 23, she is 19, and in that instant the world shrinks to the space between them. The song captures the giddy rush of young love – the late-night calls, the memories of oversized shirts, and the soundtrack of waves in Marbella – while hinting at the bittersweet truth that distance will soon pull them apart.
But “Cristina” is more than a postcard of romance; it is a confession of impossible timing. The narrator keeps asking himself how he can request her heart when he cannot promise to be there every time she cries. Music becomes his only bridge across the miles, a way to “recortar nuestra distancia con canciones” – trimming their separation with songs. In the end he chooses honesty over possession, gifting her this song as a keepsake. It is a tender reminder that some connections, though brief, leave melodies that echo long after the summer ends.
Sebastián Yatra joins forces with Spanish singer Beret in “Vuelve”, a pop ballad that feels like reading someone’s private diary out loud. Over a gentle, stirring melody, the two artists juggle love and frustration: they still adore the person in question, yet pride, distance, and mixed signals keep tearing them apart. The chorus’s plea — “Vuelve a decirme lo de siempre” (“Say the same thing to me again”) — captures that contradictory craving for both reassurance and change. Listeners are invited into a tug-of-war between hanging on and letting go, where every tender memory seems to hurt as much as it heals.
Dig a little deeper and you will hear a confession about self-growth in the rubble of a breakup. The lyrics wonder why “good things” take so long, question well-meaning advice, and admit that becoming “strong” can sometimes feel impossible. Yet, beneath the sadness, the song plants a hopeful message: things that are cared for are not thrown away so suddenly. “Vuelve” ultimately reminds us that heartbreak can be a powerful teacher, turning “people who are broken” into “people strong enough to bring others together.”
“Falta Amor” – which translates to “Missing Love” – is a heartfelt conversation between two voices that can no longer hide their pain. Sebastián Yatra, joined by Latin-pop legend Ricky Martin, sings from the raw place where love used to live. The lyrics admit to fear, guilt, and sleepless nights: he never meant to hurt anyone, yet he’s the one left empty, begging to know what was missing. Every line circles back to the same confession: me haces falta, amor – “I’m missing you, love.”
As the song builds, sadness turns to frustration. He tries to move on, but anger bubbles up, and hope lingers in the chorus: maybe one day love will finally stop being the thing they lack. With soaring vocals and a slow-building beat, “Falta Amor” captures that bittersweet moment when you’re still in love with someone who seems to have switched their heart off, leaving you with nothing but questions and echoes. It’s a bilingual, cross-generational reminder that sometimes the hardest part of breaking up is accepting that the real absence isn’t the person – it’s the love that never got shared.
Picture a cosmic love story where gravity is really just attraction in disguise. In “Básicamente,” Colombian pop star Sebastián Yatra compares himself to the Moon and his partner to a wandering planet. The Moon (Yatra) shines steadily, yet watches the planet circle restlessly, looking for light elsewhere. Every time the planet feels lost, it drifts back into the Moon’s glow, sparking questions about loyalty, boundaries, and why saying “Hola” can send emotions into orbit.
Yatra’s lyrics explore the push-and-pull of a relationship that can’t quite find equilibrium. He sings about the joy of illuminating someone’s world, but also the frustration of being taken for granted. The space imagery—Venus giving advice, the Sun setting, the night sky thick with gravity—highlights how hard it is to break free from familiar orbits. Ultimately, the song reminds us that real love means shining for ourselves first, not just reflecting someone else’s light.
Welcome to “Melancólicos Anónimos,” a tongue-in-cheek support group where Sebastián Yatra turns heartbreak into story time. In three playful “sessions,” the Colombian singer greets us with Hola and walks us through the classic breakup timeline: raw pain, stubborn nostalgia, and finally the light at the end of the tunnel. He sprinkles everyday references—unfinished TV series, a wallet photo, even a COVID joke—to show how grief infects every corner of life. Yet humor is his secret medicine; by calling his gloomy life “a meme,” he reminds us that laughing at our own misery is often the first step toward healing.
By the final greeting, the clouds have lifted, and Yatra’s heart is ready for a reboot. He keeps the sweet memories, tosses out the toxic ones, and discovers that no hay mal que cien años dura (no pain lasts forever). The song is a lively reminder that every love story, no matter how intense, has an expiration date—and that moving on does not erase the past, it simply files it away so we can keep living. Grab your tissues, but don’t forget your smile; this meeting of Melancólicos Anónimos is equal parts therapy session and dance floor invitation.
Sebastián Yatra joins forces with reggaeton icons Wisin and Nacho to turn heartbreak into an irresistible groove. Alguien Robó sounds like a party track, yet its lyrics reveal a lover in shock, firing off questions like “¿Dime si te dio lo que no te di?” as he realizes that somebody else has stolen the heart he once held. The beat stays upbeat, but the mood swings from pleading to defiant, showing how quickly love’s sweetness can flip into bitterness.
The chorus pounds home the painful truth: Alguien robó tu corazón y por ti no creo en el amor (someone stole your heart, and now I don’t believe in love). Memories of mornings “en pijama” clash with the modern breakup move “de una te bloqueo,” capturing the push-and-pull between nostalgia and self-protection. In the end, the song is a bittersweet anthem for anyone who has danced through tears, proving that even stolen hearts can spark unforgettable rhythms.
Sebastián Yatra’s “Devuélveme El Corazón” is a bittersweet plea wrapped in a soaring pop-ballad. The Colombian singer paints the picture of someone left in the dark, wondering why the person they loved disappeared “antes de tiempo.” He sifts through guilt, regret, and unanswered questions while begging for the return of his corazón, all the promises, and even the song he once wrote with dreams. The chorus hits like a confessional cry: he cannot move on until he gets back the pieces of himself that stayed with his ex-partner.
Although the lyrics overflow with sadness, the track also hints at growth. Yatra admits that love alone could not save the relationship, and recognizing that truth is its own step toward healing. Listeners will feel the ache of lost love, yet they will also hear the quiet courage it takes to ask for closure. The result is an emotional anthem that reminds us recovering a broken heart is painful, but reclaiming our own story is powerful.