

Boza lights up the stage at Lola Loita Land. Credit to Sony Music.
Los Angeles, California (June 28, 2025)- Panamanian star Boza brought his boundary-pushing sound to the heart of Spain this past weekend, performing in front of over 3,000 fans at Lola Lolita Land, one of the most visually dynamic and youth-driven festivals of the season. Set against the whimsical backdrop of Aquopolis Villanueva de la Cañada, the event merged music, digital culture, and summer spectacle—and Boza delivered one of its most unforgettable moments.
Taking the stage surrounded by waterslides, LED installations, and interactive photobooths, Boza transformed his set into a full sensory experience. Opening with “Orión,” he struck a reflective tone, using the track to ground the audience in the emotional and sonic complexity of his music. The performance was marked by intensity and restraint, showcasing his artistic evolution and the maturity of his storytelling.
But it was his performance of the global hit “Hecha Pa’ Mí” that sparked one of the evening’s most talked-about highlights. In a moment that quickly went viral, Boza invited Lola Lolita, the Spanish TikTok powerhouse and creator of the festival, to join him on stage. As they sang the chorus together, the crowd erupted, and the clip—later posted by Lola on her social platforms—instantly became a fan favorite, seamlessly blending Boza’s music with the digital zeitgeist that defines much of today’s pop culture.
Lola Lolita Land isn’t your typical music festival. Curated by one of Spain’s most influential content creators, the event was designed with social media interactivity at its core—fusing aesthetic immersion, real-time sharing, and genre-blurring performances. For Boza, whose music thrives across platforms and continents, it was the perfect environment to bring his Latin American vision into sharp focus.
Fresh off the release of SAN BLAS, his genre-bending album that fuses afrobeat, amapiano, and reggaeton, Boza’s performance in Madrid was more than a promotional stop. It was a strategic moment in his ongoing journey to position himself within the global music conversation. By performing in spaces like this—spaces that defy genre, geography, and traditional structure—Boza is shaping a new model of what it means to be a Latin artist in 2025: not limited by format, but expanded by it.
His time on stage was not just a show, but a story—told through sound, space, and spontaneous connection. Boza’s voice didn’t echo through a conventional arena; it reverberated through a waterpark transformed into a pop-cultural playground. And in doing so, he proved that his music hits just as hard in unconventional settings as it does in chart-topping playlists and urban festivals.
Madrid was not just another city on his tour—it was a canvas. And Boza painted it with authenticity, rhythm, and the kind of real-time magic that can only happen when music, memory, and social media collide.