Bella Dose, the World’s First Bilingual Latina Girl Group, Drops ‘Feliz y Soltera’ and Brings the Vibe This Summer Needs

Bella Dose, the World’s First Bilingual Latina Girl Group, Drops 'Feliz y Soltera' and Brings the Vibe This Summer Needs
Credit: Instagram/ BellaDose

Music that lives between languages has always demanded a different kind of ear. For Bella Dose, the world’s first bilingual Latina girl group, born and raised in Miami, that sound comes naturally. Their harmonies do not translate between English and Spanish, they exist in both at once. It is not a novelty. It is not a feature. It is their default setting. And in their own words, it is the result of growing up in a city where “all Latin countries’ cultures are embraced and celebrated within one another.”

Their new single, “Feliz y Soltera,” arrived recently, and while the track is wrapped in the lightness of summer and the shimmer of single-girl ease, the story behind it reveals something far more deliberate.

The four members of Bella Dose spoke to BELatina ahead of the song’s release and described a group that knows exactly who it is. They come from Cuba, Honduras, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Colombia, and Chile, but the cultural thread that ties them together is not about uniformity. It is about bringing something different to the table and letting the meal still feel whole. That feeling is evident in the track. “Feliz y Soltera” is a baddie anthem, yes. But it is also a message. One that, they say, came to them naturally.

Bella Dose Created a Song for Every Season

From the moment they stepped into the session, they wanted to create something fun. They knew the record would lean Latin. “We didn’t want to overthink it,” they said, “but we also wanted to deliver a message, no matter the topic.” That message landed on the idea that being single can be something to enjoy and something that helps you grow. “As artists, we’re evolving, and this song represents how we’re embracing the beauty of each season we go through.”

The beauty of Bella Dose’s sound is that it is fluid. The process reflects that. Because they speak both English and Spanish fluently, songwriting begins with energy rather than structure. Some days lean pop, others lean bachata. “We decide what type of genre we’re feeling that day, and once that’s decided, we think about what language would fit best,” they said. That instinct has given rise to a genre they describe as L-Pop, a fusion of reggaetón, bachata, dembow, and pop that reflects both their American and Latin American influences. And their audience, especially Gen Z Latinas, is responding to the result.

“It’s summertime and everybody wants something to jam to that resonates with them,” the group said. But it is the reaction to the message of singlehood that has struck a deeper chord. “There’s an empowering shift happening towards prioritizing personal happiness and growth over chasing relationships. We’re young, and self-love is something we could all use more of.”

Sisterhood Over Spotlight

Bella Dose has no interest in fitting the industry mold. “Latina artists can be successful without leaving their culture behind,” they said. And as much as they love exploring new sounds and pushing creative boundaries, the foundation of their success remains the same. They are a group. They are performers. They are sisters.

“There’s pressure and sometimes people don’t understand us or where we come from,” they admitted. “But the best part is we have each other.” The support is quiet and constant. When one is down, the others show up. When something feels off, someone else says so. There is no pretense. “We talk about everything, we support each other, and we always lift each other up.”

For Bella Dose, the message comes down to the way they carry themselves. After all, there is no single blueprint for what a Latina in pop is supposed to sound like, dress like, or sing about — and they are not interested in chasing one. “We’re all different, with our own stories, styles, and backgrounds,” they said. “That’s what makes us strong.”

This Is What Feels Real for Them

This next chapter of Bella Dose is one they call a rebirth. “The music is more personal, emotional, and reflective of who we’re becoming.” That self-awareness is what makes the group feel current without feeling manufactured. They want to do what feels real, writing from that place, and being fearless in what follows.

And if you’re wondering what comes next, Bella Dose offered one clue: “Be ready for the unexpected.”

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