BELANOVA plunges listeners into a cinematic night where luxury and danger ride side by side. Peso Pluma and Tito Double P paint fast-moving snapshots: cruising in a Jeep, clouds of smoke and neon-pink tusi, Balenciaga sneakers stepping straight onto a private jet. The chorus jokes about wanting a “rosa pastel” dessert but not the sweet pop song by the band Belanova—this “postre” is a flashier, risk-filled indulgence. Everywhere you look there are Kardashian-style companions, glittering Van Cleef chains, and roaring Super Duty trucks that speed off with a casual “goodbye.”
Beneath the flex, the track doubles as a modern corrido about living bélico—ready for war—where excess is both the armor and the battlefield. The artists celebrate the rush of money, status, and perpetual highs while hinting at the shadow stalking those who choose this path (“le mando un beso con la muerte”). It’s an unapologetic anthem for a lifestyle that thrills, seduces, and always keeps one eye on the cost of playing in such psychedelic, high-stakes terrain.
Hassan Emilio Kabande Laija, known professionally as Peso Pluma, is a groundbreaking Mexican singer and rapper born in 1999 in Zapopan, Jalisco. He revolutionizes regional Mexican music by blending traditional sierreño corridos with urbano genres like Latin hip hop and reggaeton, crafting a fresh and dynamic sound that has captivated global audiences.
Since his debut in 2020, Peso Pluma has risen to international fame with hits like "Por Las Noches" and "Ella Baila Sola," the latter marking the first regional Mexican song to break into the Billboard Hot 100 top 10. His albums, including the Grammy-winning Génesis and the double album Éxodo, showcase his talent and versatility, establishing him as Mexico’s most-streamed artist of all time and a key figure in the revival of the corrido tradition.