Ludmilla & Victoria Monét Live Their Stream-Queen Fantasy in Bilingual, Genre-Bending “Cam Girl”

The Afro-Brazilian superstar and R&B powerhouse unite for the first time in a playful, sensual collab that bridges funk carioca and sleek R&B.

Brazilian funk star Ludmilla and R&B powerhouse Victoria Monét join forces in “Cam Girl,” a bilingual, genre-defying anthem that's part sensual, part sonic playground. Premiered with Rolling Stone and directed by Rafael Carmo (BT Studios), the “Cam Girl” visual plays with the aesthetics of livestreaming. Ludmilla walks through a sprawling mansion holding the camera selfie-style before meeting Monét at the door, flowers in hand. From there, the duo transform the home into their stage—commanding attention, playful, sensual, and entirely self-possessed.

The bilingual track fuses Portuguese and English, weaving Ludmilla’s funk carioca roots with Monét’s signature R&B lushness. The songwriting roster is a cross-diaspora powerhouse: Ludmilla, Victoria Monét, Umberto Tavares, DJ Caetano, Jefferson Junior, John Gloria, and Lorin. Together, they crafted a soundscape that’s equal parts sultry, experimental, and global.

Directed by Rafael Carmo and filmed under the banner of BT Studios, the visual offers a fresh, self-styled spin on diaspora glamour—playful, confident, and rooted in Black femininity.

“This song was a chance for me to explore R&B in my own way,” Ludmilla explained. “Funk will always be part of who I am, but with Cam Girl I wanted to show another side of myself.”

Monét echoed that sentiment: “It felt like the perfect chance to blend worlds musically and personally. I love collaborations that push boundaries.”

Watch the video:

For Ludmilla, who has collaborated with names like Myke Towers and Steve Aoki, “Cam Girl” extends her sonic reach into R&B while keeping funk close to her identity. For Monét, fresh off the acclaim of Jaguar and her Nigerian collab with Davido, the track underscores her commitment to cross-cultural boundary-pushing.

If Latin Quarter had a mission it would be this: spotlighting collaborations where lingual and sonic borders fall away—and we watch iconic figures like Ludmilla and Victoria Monét step into their power together.

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