It is one of the most popular songs on Central American radio, frequently requested from stations across Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador.
But what most of its listeners don't know is that La Bestia (The Beast) - a ballad about the treacherous train journey across Mexico towards the US border - was commissioned by the US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency to deter prospective migrants from making the trip.
Since October last year, more than 52,000 children, many unaccompanied by adults, have arrived in the US illegally after crossing its border with Mexico. Most are refugees fleeing endemic violence in Central America.
President Barack Obama has asked Congress for US$3.7 billion ($4.25 billion) in emergency funding to address the humanitarian crisis, including $5 million to be spent on a media campaign advising people not to come to the US.
The CBP has already launched a $1 million advertising drive to put off Central American parents who plan to send their children north. According to a report by The Daily Beast, a news website, the "Dangers Awareness Campaign" was conceived by Elevation, an advertising agency based in Washington DC.
Pablo Izquierdo, the vice-president of Elevation, said that the song's warnings about the dangers of migration would be less effective if its listeners were aware of its links to the US government.
"It's not that we're trying to deceive people," he said. "The message itself is the goal, and we don't want to let the messenger interfere with the message."
The song's lyrics refer to a train known as "the Beast", a freight train with a deadly reputation, which is used by migrants to travel the length of Mexico to the US border. Many have died dropping from the train during the journey, or lost limbs after falling beneath its wheels.
Those who manage to stay on board run the risk of encountering criminal gangs, who rob vulnerable migrants or even kidnap them for ransom. La Bestia includes a reference to Mara Salvatrucha, a notorious Central American gang whose members prowl the train.
"Migrants from everywhere, entrenched along the rail ties/Far away from where they come, further away from where they go," say the lyrics.
"They call her the Beast from the South, this wretched train of death/With the devil in the boiler, whistles, roars, twists and turns."
"It is important to us that the message be delivered," Laurel Smith, the director of communications and outreach for CBP, told The Daily Beast.
"We want to make sure the audience is listening."
In 2004, as part of a similar media campaign, the CBP distributed a CD of songs to Mexican radio stations, which it later credited with contributing to a decrease in the number of migrant deaths.
Elevation produced six songs for the new campaign, including one about the dangers of crossing the Sonoran Desert into the US. La Bestia was the first to be tailored specifically to audiences in Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador.
"The other songs are in the Mexican corrido folk style," Mr Izquierdo explained, "but La Bestia is more of a modern pop song."
- The Independent