Ozuna dropped a new single called “Dedícala” on Thursday with almost no preamble. He posted a caption in Spanish, pointed followers to the link in his bio, and offered two words as the entire explanation: “sin miedo.”
That phrase means “without fear.” It’s the only direct context Ozuna gave for the release. Alongside it sat a hashtag: #MiYoDeAntes. That phrase translates roughly to “My Former Self.” Together, they communicate more than most full press releases.
Ozuna’s full name is Juan Carlos Ozuna Rosado. He’s one of the most commercially successful artists in Latin music. He was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and began releasing music in earnest around 2016. That first run was reggaeton-heavy and immediately sticky. Tracks like “Tu Foto” and “Dile Que Tu Me Quieres” built his name in Latin America. International co-signs accelerated his reach from there.
By the late 2010s, he was among the most streamed Latin artists on Spotify globally. His albums span multiple styles – dancehall, reggaeton, and romantic urbano among them. “Odisea,” “Aura,” and “ENOC” are among the best-known. He worked with virtually every major name in Latin music and crossed into English-language pop through collabs with Selena Gomez, Cardi B, and others.
His catalog is long and varied. That range is part of what makes the #MiYoDeAntes framing worth watching. “My Former Self” isn’t the language of an artist chasing radio adds or playlist placement. It’s the language of someone sorting through their own story.
That kind of pivot has become more common among established Latin urban artists. The genre has shifted in recent years toward more personal, less formula-driven music. Artists in the genre have been willing to slow down, look backward, and take stock. A hashtag like #MiYoDeAntes fits that trend.
The release itself came with no formal announcement from a label or PR team. Ozuna simply put the track out, directed followers to the bio link, and let “sin miedo” carry the weight.
“Without fear” is pointed framing for a veteran artist. It hints at past caution, or at least at the idea that something is different now. An artist with Ozuna’s catalog and commercial track record doesn’t have much left to prove commercially. This looks like it’s about something else.
The format of #MiYoDeAntes isn’t confirmed yet. It could arrive as a full album, an EP, or a run of themed singles. Thursday’s drop establishes that there’s a larger shape to this. “Dedícala” opens it.
The title means “dedicate it” in Spanish – an imperative addressed to someone unnamed. That directness fits the project’s framing well. The song will likely say more than the caption did.
“Dedícala” is available now through the link in Ozuna’s Instagram bio.
















