Zaint's ZAFRO EP Merges Afrobeat and Latin Pop
How an Orlando Artist Keeps an Afro-Latino EP in Steady Rotation
Afrobeat percussion and Latin Pop melody rarely share the same three minutes, yet Zaint built his ZAFRO EP around that exact meeting point. The release pairs a rolling Afrobeat groove with bright Latin Pop hooks. Since its August 2024 arrival, it has kept its footing with listeners who want music between scenes. Nearly two years on, it still turns up in rotation, rare for an independent release.
You can listen to our full playlis which contains the artist’s music, and know more about the artist’s work by scrolling down the page.


How Zaint Balances Afrobeat Rhythm and Latin Pop Melody on ZAFRO
ZAFRO works because Zaint treats both of its halves as load-bearing. The Afrobeat foundation carries the rhythm: syncopated percussion and a low-end pulse built for movement. The Latin Pop side supplies the melodic lift, with warm vocal phrasing and choruses that resolve the way pop is meant to. The result reads as genuinely Afro-Latino, not one genre wearing another as a costume.
That balance is the whole difference. Plenty of crossover records lean ninety percent one way and add the rest for flavour. Here the two traditions trade the lead. The verses ride an Afrobeat cadence, then the hook swings into Latin Pop without the seams showing. It is a structural choice as much as a stylistic one. That gives the ZAFRO EP more than one way in: a listener who came for the rhythm stays for the melody, and the reverse holds too.
The bilingual instinct runs underneath all of it. Written for audiences across English and Spanish, ZAFRO speaks to the wider Afro-Latino conversation on dancefloors and in playlists right now. That is where West African rhythm and Latin American pop keep finding each other. Zaint is not standing outside that movement; he is writing from inside it.
AfroMusic.News curator team: “ZAFRO earns its slot in our rotation because Zaint lets the Afrobeat groove and the Latin Pop hook carry equal weight, instead of using one to decorate the other.”

Who the ZAFRO EP Is For, From Afrobeat Heads to Latin Pop Fans
The natural audience here is the crossover listener, the kind who keeps both an Afrobeat playlist and a Latin Pop playlist open at once. Two reference points map the territory.
The first is Afro-fusion. If you follow the sound Burna Boy pushed into the global mainstream, the rhythmic backbone of ZAFRO will feel familiar. That is Afrobeat rhythm welded to pop and dancehall songwriting. Zaint works from the same instinct, letting the percussion do the heavy lifting while the songs stay radio-legible.
The second is Latin Pop. If your taste runs to the melody-first, dancefloor side that J Balvin carried worldwide, the hooks on ZAFRO land just as easily. They are written to travel, leaning on melody rather than volume.
Zaint writes for the space those two worlds share. That makes ZAFRO an easy recommendation for anyone building a genre-blending set. It moves, it sings, and it never asks the listener to pick a side.


Two Years On, the ZAFRO EP Still Earns Afro-Latino Coverage
Most releases get a short window of attention and then fade. ZAFRO has had a longer life than that. Since its August 2024 arrival, it has continued to circulate. It earned early coverage from outlets that track this kind of cross-cultural sound, including Extravafrench and Groove Africa. For an independent artist, that staying power says more than a launch-week spike.
“The blend of Afrobeat and Latin Pop was always intended to offer something unique,” said Zaint Musik, the founder behind the project. The ZAFRO EP still marks where Zaint’s sound sits, and it makes a useful starting point for anyone meeting the artist for the first time.
Where to Stream ZAFRO and Follow Zaint Online
You can stream ZAFRO and the rest of Zaint’s catalogue on Spotify and Apple Music. For new music and behind-the-scenes posts, follow Zaint across platforms: Instagram, TikTok, and the YouTube channel, or visit the official site.


