In "Después de la Fiesta," the kick is not boomy. It is a short, 808-style thud with a sharp transient. To make it "hot," you need a kick that peaks around 60Hz-80Hz but has a harmonic distortion tail up to 1kHz. If your kick disappears on laptop speakers, it isn't hot enough.

A "Despues de la Fiesta" kit isn't built for the peak-hour drop. It’s built for the .

: Features high-intensity drum samples designed to "cut through" a mix, including punchy kicks and crisp snares.

The kit is often described as "hot" due to its relevance in the current "raver" and electronic-influenced urban scene. It focuses on: Modern Urban Textures

Musicologists might call it a "tempo rubato" (stolen time), but fans call it la tumba-despaio —the slow-motion tumble. The drum kit in this track bridges two worlds: the programmed precision of trap and the human fatigue of a live drummer after a four-hour set. Tito Double P has said in interviews that the drummer recorded the track at 2 AM after a real party, and they kept the first take because it "felt tired."