Shoppers are turning up the volume on queer Latin sounds as La Musica drops Nos Liberamos, a Spanish-language Pride anthem made between Santo Domingo and London that matters for its rhythm, message and unapologetic celebration of identity. It's trending with club-ready Dembow, Baile Funk energy and a chant that doubles as manifesto.
- Bold sonic fusion: Dembow, Baile Funk, Latin, Afrobeats and electronic pressure combine for a dancefloor-ready anthem.
- Hook as manifesto: The chant “Nos Liberamos Pa’ prender el fuego” reads like a call to queer, Latin and bodily self-liberation.
- Visual grit: The video’s La 42 setting gives the song a raw, street-party authenticity with movement and chaos.
- Non-binary-led: La Musica, the project of Yselem Suazo, bridges London, Santo Domingo and Rio, blending club culture with Caribbean identity.
- Press and platforms: Backing from Remezcla’s Pride picks and Dominican tastemakers helps it cut through algorithm noise.
Why this track feels like Pride packed into three minutes
From the first beat you get heat, and not just the tempo , it’s an emotional warmth that comes from a chorus built to be shouted in a crowd. The mix of Dembow and Baile Funk gives the rhythm a push-pull that’s both familiar to Caribbean party-goers and fresh for UK club nights. That chant functions as a hook and a slogan, so you’ll find it pinging between headphones and the street.
According to coverage of the release, the production was split between Santo Domingo and London, which helps explain the record’s two-pulse personality , intimate island percussion layered with crisp, club-ready sonics. If you want a Pride track that works equally well on a sound-system and in a protest, this is it.
How the video anchors the song to Santo Domingo’s streets
Filmed in La 42, the video isn’t polished pop; it’s kinetic and a little rough, and that’s the point. The images of bodies moving through a famous street-party hub make the song feel rooted in a specific Dominican experience of freedom. That sense of place gives the anthem texture , you can hear the city in the rhythm and see it in the choreography.
This kind of location-based visual storytelling is becoming more common among artists who want to resist generic, globalised pop imagery. It’s an effective way to say, “This joy comes from here,” and it helps listeners outside the Dominican Republic understand the song’s cultural stakes.
La Musica’s identity and international movement matters
La Musica is the project of non-binary artist Yselem Suazo, and their bi-continental life , moving between London, Santo Domingo and Rio , is audible and visible in the release. That mobility gives the record an edge: it’s not just about nostalgia for a single place, it’s an active collision of diasporic identities and club cultures.
That perspective is valuable because it reframes Latin queer music as mobile and contemporary, not confined to one scene. For listeners and bookers, that means the track fits festivals, underground nights and playlists that prize hybrid sounds.
Where Nos Liberamos sits in the bigger queer-Latin moment
This release arrives amid growing attention to LGBTQIA+ Latinx artists and to queer dance scenes that reclaim club music as political space. Platforms picking up the song help it reach beyond core fans, and the track’s unapologetic Latin and Caribbean influences push back against the “algorithm-safe” mould by being loud and specific.
If you’re curating a Pride mix, this one’s a pick-me-up when you need something physical and joyous. For DJs, its rhythmic variety makes it flexible for transitions , try it after a high-energy reggaetón banger or to open a set that wants to gradually introduce percussive complexity.
How to listen, share and use the song
Listen loud and in a group if you can , the chant was written to be communal. If you’re sharing on social, pair the clip with street visuals or a behind-the-scenes note about La 42 to give followers context. DJs should cue the percussive intro for smooth blends; party hosts can use the chorus for a sing-along moment.
And if your interest is deeper, follow La Musica on Instagram and check the release on distribution platforms to support direct links and playlists.
It's a small change that can make every Pride playlist sound braver.
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