The two reggaetón stars have gone deep into salsa in their new albums. Will it make a difference for the genre?
The artist has reached the top of the charts with 'Baile Inolvidabe' and 'DtMF,' tracks that celebrate and preserve Puerto ...
The visualizer explains that the cultural practice of bomba (music and dance) emerged in communities ... “There are lots of young people doing salsa. And in Puerto Rico there always have been.
Now in my sophomore year of college, I found a drive to appreciate local music from home, both old and new. Most recently, ...
Naturally, in the spirit of that sentiment, the video for “Baile Inolvidable” (“Unforgettable Dance”), which he ... with new young musicians from Puerto Rico. All of them are 20 years ...
His reception in Puerto Rico is a hothouse incubator for his reception ... twisting roads to a mountain hamlet where his friends are waiting to drink and dance. The theme recalls Palmieri's classic ...
Throughout the 17 tracks in the album, Bad Bunny paints a picture of Puerto Rico for those who call it home. Sonically, he taps into the sounds of the island with salsa, plena ... sometimes you want ...
While Puerto Rican musicians very often celebrated their own folk music within salsa's dynamic ... marginalized Afro Latino communities of Puerto Rico in the early 1990s. A mixture of hip-hop, ...
He even samples Puerto Rico’s “Godfather of Salsa” Andy Montañez Rodrígue ... you/You taught me how to love/You taught me how to dance”) is powerful enough to become an instant classic ...
Bad Bunny created his most Puerto Rican album to date, 'Debí Tirar Más Fotos,' with the help of the island's rising stars, ...