“Viva la Revolución” carries a kind of restless energy, like it came together in the middle of trying to process something bigger than a single moment.
The groove settles in early and stays there, steady, unhurried, almost stubborn in how it moves forward. It gives Mishka space to deliver everything without forcing it. His vocal sits right in the centre, measured but fully engaged, like someone choosing their words carefully because they matter.
The song pulls in voices and legacies that still carry weight, such as Martin Luther King Jr., Nelson Mandela and others who challenged power at real cost. They are not dropped in for effect. They feel like part of a longer thread the song is trying to follow, connecting past resistance to what is happening now.
What works here is how the track holds tension without tipping into overload. It speaks on injustice, division and a world in crisis but keeps returning to something human underneath it all. There is a sense that this is not just about calling things out but about asking what comes next.
By the end, the song does not try to wrap itself up neatly. It closes without resolution, and that feels deliberate. The questions hang there, and that is where the song finds its real impact as it pushes the listener to sit with what they’ve heard and think about where they stand.
“Viva la Revolución” is out now on all platforms via Now Listen.





