Gelosa catapults us into a neon–lit after-party where romance, fame and temptation crash into each other. Shiva, Sfera Ebbasta and Guè speak to a girl whose gelosia (jealousy) sparks playful friction: she scrolls Instagram, he begs her to put the phone down. Between purple drinks, late-night drives and whispered promises, the rappers reveal the tug-of-war between their high-speed lifestyle and the need for genuine connection. Lavish gifts, unanswered calls and a Glock under the pillow paint a picture of swagger mixed with vulnerability, as if luxury could plug the emptiness left when trust starts to crack.
Beneath its catchy na-na-na hook, the song is really a tug between possessiveness and freedom. The guys flirt with danger and success yet secretly fear losing the one person who sees past the spotlight. They offer trips to Paris or London, designer clothes and a name-drop in a song, but what they truly crave is her undivided attention. “Gelosa” turns the familiar club-track vibe into a candid confession: for all the bling, anxiety and jealousy still sit in the front seat, proving that even rap’s high flyers wrestle with the same messy emotions as everyone else.