“Frío” turns a chilly feeling into a steamy reggaetón invitation. Over a smooth, late-night beat by D-Note and The Beatllionare, Puerto Rican singer Alex Rose confesses that he can’t stop thinking about a woman who is still with someone else. He insists he is the one who truly excites her, painting vivid images of dancing close, whispering in her ear, and melting the distance between them.
The word frío (“cold”) is Alex’s playful way of saying he feels lonely and untouched without her. Every line begs for warmth—her touch, her presence, even her help writing a “guitar-bodied” love song. The lyrics balance romantic longing with flirtatious bravado, sprinkling in pop-culture nods (Karol G’s famous heartbreak, a possible “trío”) to keep things fun. In short, “Frío” is a sultry call for reconnection: when passion heats up, the cold disappears.