TORRRES Levels Up With Alejo on New Single “me aburro fácil”

Written on 03/14/2026
LaMezcla Staff

TORRRES is keeping his momentum moving with “me aburro fácil,” a new single featuring Alejo that arrives just after the Puerto Rican artist’s recent Europe run and continues his fast-building 2026 release streak. The track is out now across digital platforms, with an official video already live, extending a rollout that positions TORRRES as one of the more closely watched names in the island’s next-wave urbano class. 

The collaboration matters because it pairs TORRRES with an artist who already carries real weight in Latin urban circles, while also giving the younger act another chance to sharpen the identity he has been building around his “el fkn player” persona. On paper, “me aburro fácil” is a single release. In practice, it feels more like another deliberate step in brand construction: concise, melodic, and image-conscious, with the visual component treated as part of the record’s positioning rather than an afterthought. Sony Music Latin also pushed the release on social, underscoring that this is not being treated like a casual drop. 

That timing is notable because TORRRES has been unusually active lately. Apple Music lists “me aburro fácil” as his latest release, following a recent run that also includes “Bandidita,” “Porcelana 3,” and “Zzz (Remix).” The Slayter-assisted “Zzz (Remix)” dropped on February 26, 2026, giving TORRRES back-to-back releases within a two-week window and suggesting a strategy built around sustained visibility rather than long gaps between singles. 

That is where this single starts to say something bigger about his career arc. TORRRES is no longer operating like an artist still testing the waters. The recent release pattern, the higher-profile collaborations, and the emphasis on visual identity all point to an act moving from promising newcomer into a more intentional growth phase. Alejo’s presence helps widen the record’s reach, but it also gives TORRRES a useful credibility marker: he is increasingly appearing alongside artists who can help validate his place in the broader urbano conversation. 

The market framing matters here too. Puerto Rico’s urbano pipeline remains crowded, with emerging acts fighting not just for streams but for distinction. In that environment, TORRRES’ strongest move may be that he is not selling himself purely on one viral moment. Instead, he is building a recurring aesthetic around speed, attitude, and a recognizable “player” brand, while aligning with collaborators who can move him across adjacent corners of reggaeton and Latin trap. His official profiles now show him as part of a release ecosystem that includes Sony Music Latin distribution and visible playlist support, including placement on Spotify’s All New Latin

The visual rollout adds to that. The official YouTube upload presents the record as a full video event rather than a static audio release, and the supporting materials around the single frame the piece as an extension of TORRRES’ artistic world. That approach matters because younger Latin urban acts increasingly compete through total packaging: music, image, cadence, and short-form replay value all working together. “Me aburro fácil” fits that model cleanly. 

LaMezcla’s read is that this release is less about reinvention and more about consolidation. TORRRES does not appear to be abandoning what has made him stand out; he is refining it. After linking with Slayter on “Zzz (Remix)” and now Alejo on “me aburro fácil,” he is showing a pattern of upward collaboration that can help stabilize his position in a very fluid part of the market. For emerging urbano artists, that is often the difference between being briefly visible and becoming part of the genre’s ongoing conversation. 

What comes next is worth watching. If TORRRES keeps this pace, the likely next step is a broader project or a more defined campaign tying these singles together into a stronger narrative. For now, “me aburro fácil” feels like another clean piece of evidence that his team understands the current Latin music economy: stay active, stay visible, and make every release deepen the artist’s universe. Readers can keep following LaMezcla.com and the LaMezcla Music App as this next phase unfolds.