What Does Caramelo By Ozuna Mean?

Ozuna's track, "Caramelo," was released in Spanish in 2020 and made quite the splash. Even those who don't speak Spanish can't help but be drawn to the catchy tune but are probably wondering what the lyrics they've been dancing to since last year mean. Following the release of the music video, which was inspired by the game Candyland (via Billboard), Lyrics Translate gave the Puerto Rican singer's English-speaking fans a run-down of the song's meaning.

In "Caramelo," which translates to "caramel," Ozuna sings about an undeniable chemistry he shares with a woman. "I tried you again, your mouth doesn't lose the caramel flavor / We let ourselves go, you are my shoulder bag and I am your bandit," the singer croons in the chorus. 

"That sweet little mouthful of caramel / She is an angel but if she is tempted, hot, fire / Always on high, no flight needed / She tells no one how I comfort her," he continues later in the song. The woman Ozuna is singing about in his song is "provocative" and "single" and "looks good" in a swimsuit.

Ozuna already got the girl

"Come on come, come kill me," Ozuna begs in "Caramelo" (via Lyrics Translate). He also sings, "Baby, mistreat me." 

While the entertainer seems to suggest that there is an unhealthy element to the relationship he shares with the woman in his song, he doesn't seem to be concerned about where that could lead and instead suggests they "go on a trip" and "fall in love." Ozuna then sings that the woman is already his. "You are already mine / You don't have to worry about what I want / I will always be in case that is your fear," he shares. He goes on, "My love, I am pleased / It kills me whenever it does."

As the song comes to an end, Ozuna makes it clear that the woman he's singing about is quite a unique and special catch, saying that women like her are only born "every hundred years."