Afro-Latina Star Tokischa Brings Dominican Spanish to A$AP Rocky’s New Album

Afro-Latina Star Tokischa Brings Dominican Spanish to A$AP Rocky’s New Album
Credit: Instagram/ @tokischa.sol (screenshot)

Tokischa has joined A$AP Rocky on Flackito Jodye, a new single from his album Don’t Be Dumb released this week across digital platforms.

The collaboration was confirmed in Santo Domingo through a statement from the Dominican artist’s public relations team, which also announced the release of an accompanying animated music video now available worldwide.

Curiosity Is at the Core of This Collaboration

Tokischa has built her career by moving outside rigid expectations placed on Dominican women in music, shifting between dembow, trap, and experimental pop while maintaining full control of her image and sound. A$AP Rocky emerged from Harlem with a style influenced by street culture and high fashion, later expanding into film and business ventures.

They meet as artists who built their careers on their own terms. Flackito Jodye allows each performer to remain distinct, with Tokischa delivering her verses in Spanish alongside Rocky’s English flow without softening either presence to fit industry formulas.

The Presence of New York and Dominican Republic in a Video

The music video presents the pair through retro style three dimensional animation, creating a digital version of a familiar city landscape. The production places the story along St. Nicholas Avenue, also known as Juan Pablo Duarte Boulevard, a street that connects Harlem and Washington Heights.

Harlem is where Rocky was born and raised. Washington Heights remains one of the largest Dominican neighborhoods in the United States. The avenue carries the name of the Dominican Republic’s founding father, turning the setting into a reference to migration, neighborhood history, and shared cultural memory.

According to the statement released with the video, the visual concept was designed to capture the artistic chemistry between the two performers through animation that mirrors their interest in experimentation.

Its Global Influence Tokischa

Tokischa continues expanding her reach outside the Caribbean while keeping her identity intact. Her appearance on a major American rap album places Dominican Spanish inside mainstream hip hop without translation or explanation.

The song now circulates globally, carried by a video that turns one New York avenue into a symbolic meeting point between Harlem and Washington Heights, between English and Spanish, between separate histories that intersect more often than popular culture admits.

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