Grab your sombrero and a box of tissues, because “FIRST LOVE” is a bittersweet ride through the aftermath of a first heartbreak. Over a lively Regional Mexican beat, Oscar Ortiz and Edgardo Núñez pour out raw emotions as the narrator revisits the night he was left derrotado (defeated). He admits to replaying memories “like a fool,” wondering why the relationship ended when he “wasn’t the bad guy.” The song paints a vivid picture of lonely birthdays, sleepless nights, and that stubborn ache that refuses to fade.
Yet buried inside the sorrow is a tale of growth and self-discovery. Each verse shows how pain can spark maturity: the narrator realizes he has changed since she left, but closure still escapes him. “Explain to me once,” he pleads, echoing the universal need to understand a sudden goodbye. The repeated chorus—“Solo tú, solo tú, solo tú”—highlights both his fixation on his former love and the lingering question of why. In just a few passionate minutes, “FIRST LOVE” captures the stormy mix of nostalgia, regret, and reluctant resilience that follows a first real heartbreak, all wrapped in the rich melodies of modern Regional Mexican music.