The Rainbow Friends Song 2 came out of something that was already moving in a big way. I had already worked with Cuadradito y Circulito on the first The Rainbow Friends Song as se7en beatlab, and that song had already found a huge audience. It really connected with the world around Rainbow Friends, Roblox, YouTube, and the kind of songs that end up reaching kids, teenagers, and plenty of older people who are already part of that space too.

What made this second song interesting was how much bigger the collaboration became. Once Lynita and Chocoblox came in, the work was not about copying something that had already worked. It was about reopening the session, getting into the multitracks, and building the song again from a different angle. That is a big part of how things move now in the music industry: you take an idea that already has real traction and rework it so it can grow into something wider, stronger, and more defined.

I said yes to this collaboration because I could see there was already something real behind it, but also because it felt like the kind of project I would genuinely enjoy working on. It had energy, movement, and a lot of room to play from the production side. That made the whole process fun in the best sense of the word. Ideas were moving fast, things kept evolving, and the song kept opening up as we worked on it.

The whole thing came together remotely between Brazil, Argentina, and Spain, which is also part of what makes the story interesting. The song kept growing through shared files, vocals, arrangements, and decisions moving back and forth until everything found its place. In that sense, it says a lot about the way remote music production works today, especially when a song has to live across video, streaming, and different platforms at the same time.

What I like most about this track is the way different worlds came together without pulling the song apart. Cuadradito y Circulito, Lynita, and Chocoblox already had huge audiences and a very clear identity inside that universe, while se7en beatlab came in from the production side to help shape all of that into one song with direction and cohesion. And like any collaboration that is built properly, there was also the professional side of it: credits, splits, organization, and making sure every part of the project added real value.

The numbers ended up showing that the song had real weight behind it. The first The Rainbow Friends Song has more than 5.6 million streams on Spotify; The Rainbow Friends Song 2 has passed 2.68 million on Spotify; the official video has gone over 11 million views on YouTube; and the single also made it onto Apple Music, moving through the usual path of a distributor and the platforms where so much of today’s digital music industry measures reach. More than just another follow-up, it became a way of taking something that already had a huge audience and pushing it further.