I like men, so it’s normal that I sing to them. “I don’t set out to write the songs in a particular way it’s simply my perspective. “In fact, I would have chosen another name, like Beyoncé,” she jokes today.Ī certain resilience has characterized the life of this young nonbinary star (she prefers the pronouns she/her or he/him to they/them), who is redefining reggaeton almost incidentally. She discovered this when she was older: Someone had made up that she’d said if she were a woman, she would want to be called Macarena, like the protagonist of the famous song by Los del Río. Meet La Dani, the Queer Artist Changing the Reggaeton Scene in Spain