Kevin Fret Is Latin Trap's First Openly Gay Pioneer
LGBTQ

Kevin Fret Is Latin Trap's First Openly Gay Pioneer

By Jhoni Jackson

He's the trailblazer we never expected: Kevin Fret, a 24-year-old unabashedly, outspokenly gay Latin trap artist, born in Puerto Rico, currently living in Miami, and with an Instagram following of 46.4k and counting.

While the massively popular genre leader Bad Bunny somehow earns queer cred for even the slightest feminine nuances (like painted nails), he's never publicly identified as anything but heterosexual. Kevin Fret, however, is actually gay — he wants everyone to know, but he also doesn't give a damn what you think about it.

"I'm a person that doesn't care what anybody has to say," he stresses. "[Now I see] young gay guys or young lesbians that are looking at me now like a role model, like wow, if he did it, and he don't care what anybody else has to say, I can do it."

In the video for his debut single, "Soy Asi," which has amassed more than 163k views in less than a month, Fret sports sparkly oversized shades, super-glossed lips, and a glittering crop top and pant set that was formerly a bodysuit. After last year's lipo, he says, he wasn't about to cover up his stomach for the official launch of his career.

"I had everything in my mind, like the day I come out [in Latin trap] as a gay guy, I'm going to make my first video and I'm going to be showing my stomach, and I'm going to act like I don't give a damn about what anybody has to say — with my blonde hair, my black nails, showing my stomach, glittery from head to toe," he says.

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It sorta goes without saying that Latin trap, like much of popular hip-hop, is riddled with misogyny and homophobia. It's a fact we sometimes accept from mainstream music, yet we don't let that kind of bigotry fly in our daily lives. Kevin Fret, however, is transcending the machismo and transforming the genre.

He's not a perfect hero, though. A strict religious upbringing is his reasoning for saying in a recent interview forRapetón that being gay is a choice — for him. It wasn't until he was 18 that he came out, Fret adds. Addressing the subject in this interview with PAPER, he notes the personal context, that it's how he feels specifically, and acknowledges that most LGBTQIA people disagree. (Science also disagrees).

So he's flawed, yes. But he's no doubt queering the Latin trap genre — and that's a positive change we can definitely get behind.

Photo Courtesy Enrique Montes Benitez of Evo Lab Photography