“Pueblerina” is built on a reclamation. Adriana Lucía takes a word that carries the weight of provincial dismissal and sets it over a flauta de millo line, tambora, and tambor alegre, returning it to the ground where it was never an insult. She chooses to go back despite disagreement, and that choice is the structural fact the track rests on. Cumbia’s call-and-response dialagues with a afrobeats production layer. The Afro-Caribbean percussion already present in cumbia before any contemporary influence arrives and the flauta de millo holds the center and the rest moves around it.
Filmed across Lorica, Nariño, and Mata de Caña in Córdoba, the video places Lucía inside the ordinary life the song describes rather than apart from it. After 25 years working across vallenato, champeta, porro, and cumbia, and writing for Marc Anthony and Paulina Rubio, the move toward something this direct reads as a position, not a return. The countryside as the source of food, music, and poetry is the argument. The flauta de millo makes it without explaining it.





