Late feels like a spontaneous late-night escape where reason takes the back seat and raw emotion grabs the steering wheel. Pol Granch sings from the hazy space between anxiety and euphoria: he is chain-lighting cigarettes, asking for “un poquito de eso” and “aquello,” and begging his crush to stay just four more minutes. In those borrowed minutes every heartbeat sounds like a drum fill, improvisation replaces planning, and two imperfect people decide to float together in the dark, astronaut-style, far from gravity.
The lyrics jump between playful bravado and nervous confession, painting love as an addictive pill with “caducidad inmortal” and the singer as a rookie space traveler scared yet thrilled. This is not a neat love story with a tidy ending. It is a rush of desire, fear, and hope compressed into the present tense, where bodies speak louder than words and every ta-ta-ta echoes a racing heart that finally dares to just flow and fall in love.