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.