Cypress Hill & Alemán – Wacha Trucha [Video]

Cypress Hill open a new chapter with “Wacha Trucha,” a high-energy collaboration with Alemán that feels bigger than a one-off link-up.

The track arrives as the first official single from Cypress Hill’s upcoming new album—a project performed entirely in Spanish. That alone gives the release real weight: this is not just a guest-heavy loosie, but the start of a broader statement about heritage, identity, and cultural connection from a group that helped carve out space for Latino voices in hip-hop in the first place.

What makes “Wacha Trucha” hit is how naturally it bridges generations and scenes. Cypress Hill bring the authority and legacy, while Alemán adds the kind of presence that makes the collaboration feel current rather than ceremonial. In Cypress Hill’s own framing, the song represents a homecoming and a direct connection to their culture and their people, and that sense of purpose comes through in the track’s energy. It moves like an anthem, but not in a hollow, slogan-heavy way—more like a record built to remind listeners that this lineage is still alive, still evolving, and still loud.

There is also something smart about the way the release leans fully into Spanish instead of treating it like a side experiment. Cypress Hill were among the earliest Latin American acts to gain major recognition in hip-hop, so “Wacha Trucha” feels less like a pivot than a return to something foundational. Outside coverage has described the track as both a celebration of Latino roots and a call for unity, and that fits the record’s momentum well. It carries pride, grit, and intent without sounding overly self-conscious about any of it.

The video helps seal that feeling. Rather than overcomplicating the concept, it gives the song room to breathe and lets the chemistry between Cypress Hill and Alemán do most of the heavy lifting. That is the right move for a track like this. “Wacha Trucha” does not need distractions—it already has identity, force, and enough character to carry the screen on its own. Even brief write-ups around the release have pointed to its old-school feel, and that comes through as part of the appeal rather than a limitation.

More than anything, “Wacha Trucha” feels like a mission statement. It announces a new Cypress Hill era while reconnecting the group to the language, roots, and cultural energy that have always been part of their foundation. With Alemán in the mix, the result feels sharp, timely, and built with real purpose. If this is the tone-setter for the upcoming all-Spanish album, Cypress Hill are not easing into this next phase — they are kicking the door open.

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