News
9 July 2026 – Girl Ultra Announces 'RRRomeo' And Floats Away With 'Denisse'
By Editorial Team - July 9, 2026
Summary
Girl Ultra announces her upcoming album 'RRRomeo' and shares new co-produced single 'Denisse'.
Key Facts
- Girl Ultra announced her new album 'RRRomeo', releasing on October 9.
- She shared lead single 'Denisse' which was co-produced by electronic duo Chromeo.
- The album features high-profile collaborations with Buscabulla, Empress Of, and Jean Tonique.
- Entities: Girl Ultra, Chromeo, Buscabulla, Empress Of, Jean Tonique, Mexico City
- Tags: girl ultra, rrromeo, denisse, alternative pop, mexico city, chromeo, buscabulla, empress of, r&b, latin pop
Mexico City's <a href="/tags/girl-ultra">Girl Ultra</a> has announced her forthcoming album <i>RRRomeo</i>, set for release on 9 October, and shared the new single 'Denisse'.
The project already sounds like it wants to exist somewhere between a dancefloor, a memory, a late-night drive through Mexico City and a teenage bedroom where old pop records are treated like sacred texts.
Co-produced with Chromeo and featuring collaborations with Buscabulla, Empress Of, Jean Tonique and Chromeo, the album promises a lush, genre-fluid world that refuses to pick one lane and then politely indicate. Good. Lanes are overrated, especially when the car has this much groove.
'Denisse' is built around letting go, nostalgia and the ghostly importance of people who remain suspended in memory long after daily life has moved on.
The song is tender without becoming fragile, cinematic without feeling bloated, and nostalgic without turning into a museum tour. It carries the emotional texture of remembering someone not as they were every day, but as they appear in the mind years later: slightly blurred, warmly lit and probably wearing better lighting than real life ever allowed.
The accompanying visual image of Girl Ultra travelling through dreamlike spaces on a flying carpet captures the track's mood perfectly. It is surreal, intimate and quietly funny in the way dreams often are. One second you are soaring above childhood memories, the next you are wondering whether your subconscious has a production budget.
Girl Ultra's strength has always been her ability to treat pop, R&B, funk and electronic textures as emotional languages rather than fixed genres. 'Denisse' continues that approach. It has polish, but not the cold kind; groove, but not empty decoration; feeling, but not melodrama. As the first proper doorway into <i>RRRomeo</i>, it suggests an album about memory, romance, movement and identity, all with a wink from under the disco lights.