Mundo (feat. Moira Dela Torre)
Flow G
The warm bassline arrives first — unhurried, almost hesitant — before Flow G's voice settles in with a conversational cadence that refuses to rush itself. The production sits in a gentle pocket between hip-hop and acoustic pop, with nylon-string guitar textures weaving through programmed percussion that never overpowers the intimacy of the moment. Moira Dela Torre's entrance transforms the track entirely: where Flow G narrates with measured vulnerability, her voice opens into something rawer, a trembling sweetness that makes the emotional stakes suddenly feel physical. The song inhabits that specific pain of loving someone whose absence has become its own presence — not the dramatic grief of a breakup but the quieter ache of a world that has lost its color. It moves between spoken-word rap and melodic chorus in a way that mirrors how grief itself works, lurching from numbness to feeling without warning. OPM's relationship with emotionally direct love songwriting finds one of its more honest modern expressions here — neither overwrought nor detached. You reach for this late at night, headphones in, when you're not ready to explain to anyone exactly why you're sad.
slow
2010s
intimate, warm, gentle
Filipino OPM
Hip-Hop, OPM. acoustic hip-hop. melancholic, vulnerable. Opens in measured numbness and narration before Moira's entrance cracks it open into raw, physical grief.. energy 3. slow. danceability 2. valence 3. vocals: conversational male rap, breathy emotional female guest, intimate vulnerability. production: nylon-string guitar, programmed percussion, warm hip-hop pocket, minimal layers. texture: intimate, warm, gentle. acousticness 6. era: 2010s. Filipino OPM. Late night with headphones in when you're inexplicably sad and not ready to explain it to anyone.