"Yo x Ti, Tú x Mí" is a song by Spanish singer
Rosalía and Puerto Rican singer
Ozuna. Written by both performers alongside
El Guincho and produced by the latter with the help of
Frank Dukes, the track was released as a single on August 15, 2019, through
Columbia Records.[3] Continuing the journey and exploration of Rosalía to urban music that "
Con Altura" started, it reached number one in the singer's home country, becoming her fifth number-one single and her fourth consecutive number-one. It later won two
Latin Grammy Awards for
Best Urban Song and
Best Urban Fusion/Performance, the second consecutive time Rosalía won those categories and Ozuna's first Grammy.[4]
Background
The song was first teased by Rosalía on her social media on 13 August 2019.[5][6] The snippet sees the singer wearing a headband and facetiming Ozuna.[7][8] Rosalía previously expressed appreciation for Ozuna's music by posting an acoustic version of "
Amor Genuino" in July 2019.[9] The song is also featured on the official soundtrack of FIFA 20, which was released via
Spotify,
Apple, and
Deezer on September 13.[10][11]
Critical reception
In a positive review, Suzy Exposito of Rolling Stone complimented the song for being a "featherweight reggaeton groove" while also pointing out the "flirty verses" between the singers.[1] Suzette Fernandez at Billboard noted that the song fuses "
reggaeton,
flamenco and
electronic sounds".[12] Writing for MTV, Madeline Roth stated that the song is "a romantic, reggaeton offering with a deceptively simple chorus".[2]
Music video
A music video for "Yo x ti, tú x mí" was released through Rosalía's YouTube channel on 15 August 2019. It was directed by Cliqua (RJ Sanchez and Pasqual Gutierrez).[13] It was recorded in a mansion in
Miami in January 2019 which means the song had been recorded previously.[14] The filming lasted four days. The video features shots of Rosalía and Ozuna getting close with each other and dancing in various luxury hotel rooms while going through multiple costume changes.[1] Jem Aswad of Variety described the visuals as "a light-hearted romantic outing with the Puerto Rican rapper/singer" and drew comparisons to
Ariana Grande.[15]
"Yo x Ti, Tú x Mí" is a song by Spanish singer
Rosalía and Puerto Rican singer
Ozuna. Written by both performers alongside
El Guincho and produced by the latter with the help of
Frank Dukes, the track was released as a single on August 15, 2019, through
Columbia Records.[3] Continuing the journey and exploration of Rosalía to urban music that "
Con Altura" started, it reached number one in the singer's home country, becoming her fifth number-one single and her fourth consecutive number-one. It later won two
Latin Grammy Awards for
Best Urban Song and
Best Urban Fusion/Performance, the second consecutive time Rosalía won those categories and Ozuna's first Grammy.[4]
Background
The song was first teased by Rosalía on her social media on 13 August 2019.[5][6] The snippet sees the singer wearing a headband and facetiming Ozuna.[7][8] Rosalía previously expressed appreciation for Ozuna's music by posting an acoustic version of "
Amor Genuino" in July 2019.[9] The song is also featured on the official soundtrack of FIFA 20, which was released via
Spotify,
Apple, and
Deezer on September 13.[10][11]
Critical reception
In a positive review, Suzy Exposito of Rolling Stone complimented the song for being a "featherweight reggaeton groove" while also pointing out the "flirty verses" between the singers.[1] Suzette Fernandez at Billboard noted that the song fuses "
reggaeton,
flamenco and
electronic sounds".[12] Writing for MTV, Madeline Roth stated that the song is "a romantic, reggaeton offering with a deceptively simple chorus".[2]
Music video
A music video for "Yo x ti, tú x mí" was released through Rosalía's YouTube channel on 15 August 2019. It was directed by Cliqua (RJ Sanchez and Pasqual Gutierrez).[13] It was recorded in a mansion in
Miami in January 2019 which means the song had been recorded previously.[14] The filming lasted four days. The video features shots of Rosalía and Ozuna getting close with each other and dancing in various luxury hotel rooms while going through multiple costume changes.[1] Jem Aswad of Variety described the visuals as "a light-hearted romantic outing with the Puerto Rican rapper/singer" and drew comparisons to
Ariana Grande.[15]