Tusa (remix)
Ozuna
The "Tusa" remix with Ozuna takes KAROL G and Nicki Minaj's already-massive anthem and injects a distinctly masculine perspective, Ozuna's honeyed falsetto entering the emotional register from the other side of heartbreak. Where the original mapped female pain with anthemic precision, Ozuna's addition softens the edges into something more vulnerable, his distinctive Puerto Rican trap-pop style creating unexpected warmth against the track's euphoric melancholy. The production — those synth-driven dembow patterns, the drop that arrives like a physical release — remains intact, but gains new dimension with Ozuna's harmonic contribution. Lyrically the remix explores mutual emotional wreckage after separation, the "tusa" (Colombian slang for heartbreak) becoming a shared condition rather than a gendered one. There's something culturally significant in this reframing: reggaeton's machismo tradition briefly suspended in favor of emotional honesty. Best heard when you're over someone but your body hasn't received the message yet — functional healing music that lets you dance through the grief.
medium
2010s
euphoric, melancholic, shimmering
Puerto Rico / Colombia
Reggaeton, Pop. Trap-Pop Reggaeton. Melancholic, Euphoric. Begins in heartbreak vulnerability and evolves toward euphoric catharsis, dancing through grief rather than past it.. energy 7. medium. danceability 8. valence 5. vocals: honeyed falsetto, vulnerable, warm, harmonic, Puerto Rican inflection. production: synth-driven dembow, euphoric drops, layered vocal harmonics, polished pop production. texture: euphoric, melancholic, shimmering. acousticness 1. era: 2010s. Puerto Rico / Colombia. Best when you're over someone but your body hasn't received the message yet — dance through the grief.