Blog
Page: 609
Ed Sheeran brought the cozy pub experience to Coachella for fans to get tipsy and listen to music, but there was nothing ordinary about the set — featuring special guests Shaboozey and Alex Warren — he performed inside.
In videos posted to Instagram Sunday (April 20), the British pop star stands with an acoustic guitar in front of a small crowd gathered inside his Old Phone Pub pop-up, a structure specially created to make guests in the desert feel like they’re actually grabbing a pint at a hole-in-the-wall joint. But Sheeran isn’t alone. In one clip, ‘Boozey joins him to perform his record-tying 19-week Billboard Hot 100-topper “A Bar Song (Tipsy),” smiling as he sings in unison with the “Shape of You” musician before stepping out into the audience, inviting one woman to get up and dance with him.
In another clip, Sheeran welcomes breakout star Alex Warren, a TikToker whose hit “Ordinary” has rapidly propelled him to the top 10 of the Hot 100 this year. “I met this guy today for the first time,” Sheeran says before Warren steps up to the mic. “I’m so honored that he’s come to join us.”
Trending on Billboard
The pair then sings the heartfelt ballad together as Sheeran plays guitar. In the comments, the four-time Grammy winner wrote, “There’s like one song every year that blows my socks off, and it’s this one.”
“Such an incredible song and talent, such an honour having you down man, and congrats on everything, so deserved,” Sheeran, who also played the Mojave stage on Saturday (April 20), added of Warren and “Ordinary.”
Sunday marked the final day of Coachella 2025, which occurred over the course of two back-to-back weekends and saw headliners Lady Gaga, Green Day and Post Malone take the main stages. The festival was only the latest host site for Sheeran’s Old Phone Pub, which the musician previously set up for one night only in Ipswich, Mass., to promote his new single, “Azizam,” ahead of upcoming album Play.
Watch Sheeran perform with ‘Boozey and Warren below.
Justin Bieber and wife Hailey Bieber have not yet shown the world what their seven-month-old son Jack Blues Bieber’s face looks like. But over the weekend, Beliebers got to witness in a major milestone for the couple’s first-born: Jack’s on his belly ready to crawl. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, […]
Lil Durk wants a judge to dismiss murder-for-hire charges he’s facing over a 2022 shooting, claiming the feds gave “false evidence” to a grand jury by citing song lyrics that he wrote more than six months before the attack ever took place.
Prosecutors charged the Chicago drill star (Durk Banks) last year over allegations that ordered his “OTF” crew to murder rival Quando Rondo in – accusations they backed up by quoting lyrics from a song called “Wonderful Wayne & Jackie Boy” that allegedly referenced the shooting.
But in a motion to dismiss the case filed Friday, Durk’s attorneys said those lyrics could not possibly have made mention of the Rondo shooting because the rapper wrote them “seven months before the incident even happened.”
Trending on Billboard
“The government told the grand jury that Mr. Banks, through specific lyrics in his music, celebrated and profited from a revenge murder that he had ordered,” writes Durk’s lawyer Drew Findling. “That claim is demonstrably false.”
The allegedly incriminating lyrics came as a feature on a track released by Babyface Ray in December 2022 – three months after the Rondo shooting. But in their motion this week, Durk’s lawyer say he recorded his verses in January and had no subsequent involvement in the song. They cited sworn affidavits from two music producers who worked on “Wonderful Wayne,” who both said Durk made no edits to the lyrics after the shooting.
“Unless the government is prosecuting Banks on a theory of extra-sensory prescience, the lyrics could not have soundly informed the grand jury’s finding of probable cause,” Findling writes.
The use of rap music as evidence in criminal cases is controversial, as critics argue it threatens free speech and can sway juries by tapping into racial biases. Over the past few years, the practice has drawn backlash from the music industry and led to efforts by lawmakers to stop it. But it has continued largely unabated, most notably in the recent criminal case against Young Thug in Atlanta, in which prosecutors made extensive use of his music.
Durk was arrested in October on murder-for-hire and gun charges related to the September 2022 shooting at a Los Angeles gas station, which left Rondo (Tyquian Bowman) unscathed but saw friend Lul Pab (Saviay’a Robinson) killed in the crossfire.
Prosecutors say Durk’s Only The Family crew was not merely a well-publicized group of Chicago rappers, but a “hybrid organization” that also functioned as a criminal gang to carry out violent acts “at the direction” of Durk. One of them was the Rondo attack, the feds say, allegedly carried out in retaliation for the 2020 killing of rapper King Von (Dayvon Bennett), a close friend of Durk’s.
“Banks put a monetary bounty out for an individual with whom Banks was feuding named T.B.,” prosecutors wrote in the indictment, referring to Rondo by his initials. “Banks ordered T.B.’s murder and the hitmen used Banks and OTF-related finances to carry out the murder.”
In addition to Durk, prosecutors have also charged several alleged OTF members — Kavon London Grant, Deandre Dontrell Wilson and Asa Houston — as well as two other alleged Chicago gang members named Keith Jones and David Brian Lindsey.
To support those claims, prosecutors alleged that Durk “sought to commercialize” Lul Pub’s death by “rapping about his revenge” on Rondo: “Told me they got an addy (go, go)/ Got location (go, go)/ Green light (go, go, go, go, go),” Durk raps in the track. “Look on the news and see your son/You screamin’, “No, no” (pu–y).”
But in Friday’s motion to dismiss, Durk’s lawyers say that accusation is “patently false,” and that including them in the indictment is the kind of “egregious” prosecutorial conduct that requires the judge to toss the case entirely.
“A prosecutor who knowingly secures an indictment based upon false information, or who allows a falsely obtained indictment to persist, routs the grand jury from its central protective function,” Findling writes. “That is clearly what happened here.”
Durk’s indictment also alleged that “Wonderful Wayne” makes direct reference to a news clip filmed shortly after the shooting, in which Rondo can be heard screaming “no, no!” after seeing Lul Pab’s dead body. But his lawyers now say those were internet edits posted to YouTube, and that the audio from the news broadcast was not used in the original.
“Mr. Banks did not create these videos, and the government has failed to show any nexus between these manufactured video clips and Mr. Banks,” Finding says. “The internet users who posted the videos … are apparent ‘fan pages’ maintained by people with no affiliation to Mr. Banks.”
Dismissing criminal charges at the outset is a drastic step that courts rarely take. But Durks’ attorneys say the lyrics were the “linchpin” to the case against him, forming one of only two pieces of evidence that was presented to the grand jury that issued the indictment.
“For the grand jury not to have been substantially influenced by that evidence in its decision to indict is inconceivable,” Findling writes.
All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.
With massive hits such as “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” “She Loves You,” “Can’t Buy Me Love,” “A Hard Day’s Night” and more, The Beatles have been a timeless and classic rock band spanning generations of fans. Songwriters John Lennon and Paul McCartney fueled the music, and a new biography takes a closer look at their deep and complicated relationship.
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
On sale for $29 (regularly $32) on Amazon, John & Paul: A Love Story in Songs follows Lennon and McCartney’s relationship as songwriters, lyricists and bandmates in The Beatles. Author Ian Leslie drew from tunes, film footage and recordings to paint a picture of two musicians working together to create some of the greatest songs of the 20th century.
If you’re an Amazon Prime member, you can order now, and John & Paul: A Love Story in Songs will be delivered to your home in less than two days once it’s released thanks to Prime Delivery.
Not a member? Sign up for a 30-day free trial to take advantage of all that Amazon Prime has to offer, including access to Prime Video, Prime Gaming and Amazon Photos; fast, free shipping in less than two days with Prime Delivery; in-store discounts at Whole Foods Market; access to exclusive shopping events — such as Prime Day and Black Friday — and much more. Learn more about Amazon Prime and its benefits here.
The memoir is also available at BookShop.org for $29.76, while John & Paul: A Love Story in Songs is buyable at Barnes & Noble priced also at $29.
Celadon Books
Amazon No. 1 Best Seller
‘John & Paul: A Love Story in Songs’
by Ian Leslie
$29
$32
9% off
$29
$32
9% off
$29.76
$32
7% off
In addition, John & Paul: A Love Story in Songs is available as an Audible audiobook, which is only $0.99 for subscribers only.
If you’re not a subscriber, you can sign up for a 30-day free trial. But right now, Audible has a new promotion that gives new subscribers three months of service for just $0.99 per month. You’ll receive one credit for any audiobook on Audible. But act fast and sign up now — this deal ends on Wednesday, April 30.
Throughout their careers in music, Lennon (who died in 1980) and McCartney have seven Grammy Awards as songwriters in The Beatles, including best performance by a vocal group for “A Hard Day’s Night,” album of the year for “Revolver” and “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” and others.
Want more? For more product recommendations, check out our roundups of the best Xbox deals, studio headphones and Nintendo Switch accessories.
Pope Francis, the Catholic Church’s first Latin American pontiff, died early on Easter Monday (April 21). He was 88 years old.
“Dearest brothers and sisters, with deep sorrow, I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis. At 7:35 this morning, The Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the Father’s house. His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and His church,” Cardinal Kevin Farrell, the Vatican camerlengo said in a statement.
Born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Argentina, Francis became pope in 2013 and charmed the world with his humble personality and concern for the poor. He suffered from chronic lung disease, and in February of this year, he spent 38 days at the Gemelli hospital in Rome for a respiratory condition that developed into double pneumonia.
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
Following the news of his death, a wave of Latin artists shared their condolences on social media.
Trending on Billboard
“Rest in peace and power, Pope Francis, you opened hearts and minds and were fearless in your guidance,” Cuban-American singer Gloria Estefan wrote on Instagram. “Thank you for putting love first until your last moments on this earth.”
“Francisco, you didn’t want to please everyone, but rather to speak your mind and what was in keeping with Christ’s word. What a wonderful way to honor hope. Rest in peace, dear brother,” Spanish crooner Alejandro Sanz noted on X.
As for Colombian pop star Sebastian Yatra and the account manager of the late Argentine Leo Dan, both shared photos they had of the day they met the Pope, and captioned their posts with a similar sentiment: “vuela alto” (fly high).
Meanwhile, Puerto Rican rapper Residente shared a photo of a young Francis on Instagram Stories, stating that he is “unrepeatable, special, unique,” while Argentine duo Pimpinela and Argentine pop star Emilia expressed their love and respect, all on their respective Instagram Stories.
The next pope has not yet been named.
At the age of 10, Melody became a precocious phenomenon in Spanish pop with “El Baile del Gorila,” the lead single from her album De Pata Negra, which led her to embark on an international tour. Twenty-four years later, the singer and songwriter is facing the challenge of representing Spain at the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest, which will be held on May 17 in Basel, Switzerland.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
The song she will perform is “Esa Diva,” a pop track that’s both a vocal challenge and a manifesto of empowerment. “A diva is brave, powerful/ Her life is a garden full of thorns and roses/ She rises up dancing/ Stronger than a hurricane,” goes part of the chorus, in Spanish. With an intense performance and dynamic staging, Melody is aiming for more than just a show — a story with purpose and soul.
“I didn’t want to go with an empty dance song. I wanted it to have a message, strength, to speak about something that happens to all of us,” the artist explains in an interview with Billboard Español.
Trending on Billboard
The song has been widely embraced since its debut at the Benidorm Fest, evolving with new versions. The original was co-written by Melody and Alberto Fuentes Lorite and produced by Joy Deb, Peter Boström, and Thomas G:son. On March 13, a symphonic version was released, arranged by Borja Arias and performed by Melody alongside the RTVE Orchestra and Choir, adding a more cinematic and emotional dimension to the track.
“I wanted to show it in a different way. I’m a fan of soundtracks, and this song called for an orchestral treatment,” Melody says. “If a rhythmic song works as a ballad, it’s a great song.”
Beyond the music, “Esa Diva” has become a symbol. “The diva isn’t just the one who shines on stage –she’s the one who fights, the one who falls and gets back up. The one who supports other women. The one who is strong, but also humble,” Melody notes. And many people have found comfort and inspiration in this message. One of the anecdotes that has moved her most is about a young woman undergoing cancer treatment who listens to the song daily to gather strength.
Although this is not the first time Melody has tried to represent Spain at Eurovision — she did so in 2009 with “Amante de la Luna” — she feels that now is the right time. “If I didn’t do it now, I was never going to do it. It was the moment,” she adds. “I feel it, and I’m enjoying it like never before.”
Her victory at Benidorm Fest 2025 confirms this: She was the audience favorite, earning first place in the tele-vote with a solid 39%. Although the jury placed her third, the combination of both votes secured her direct pass to Eurovision.
With six albums released, tours across Latin America and roles in series like Cuéntame Cómo Pasó and Arde Madrid, the singer and actress has navigated genres and formats with ease. “It’s been many years. And here we are, with a good attitude, eager to sing and keep making the audience happy. What more could you ask for?” the performer of “Parapapá” and “Rúmbame” says with a laugh.
Meanwhile, she continues to bring her music across Europe as part of her pre-Eurovision tour, TheDIVAXperience. In recent days, she has performed in Amsterdam and London, presenting the new version of “Esa Diva” to specialized media and Eurovision fans. On April 7, the artist was welcomed in Dos Hermanas, her hometown, where she performed the song from the balcony of City Hall before a crowd. “The love from my hometown moves me. When you’re recognized at home, it feels different,” she says.
This week, she will participate in the PrePartyES in Madrid (April 18-19), where she will share the stage with representatives from various European delegations. Then, on April 23, she will headline a special farewell event organized by RTVE at Teatro Barceló before heading to Basel for the contest.
The staging for Eurovision promises a significant evolution compared to what was seen at the Benidorm Fest. Melody has indicated that the set design will include new visual and choreographic elements, aiming to make the most of the technical possibilities of the stage. “There will be new ingredients. It won’t just be a song; it’s a story I want to tell,” she says, making it clear that her proposal seeks to move audiences beyond the visual spectacle.
Recently becoming a mother, Melody, an independent artist and an advocate for meaningful lyrics, acknowledges that balancing it all is not easy: “I organize myself however I can. But my son recharges my batteries, and when I need grounding, I go back home.” Participating in Eurovision involves much more than stepping onto a big stage — it means enduring a level of media exposure, artistic pressure, and public scrutiny that is hard to match.
Regarding the flood of opinions surrounding this experience, Melody maintains a firm stance. “I value constructive criticism; there’s always room to learn. But destructive criticism doesn’t affect me. I’m not driven by that. I sing from the heart, and that’s why I’m here,” she says.
Her approach is not casual. Eurovision generates a massive volume of social media conversations every year, with millions of interactions, according to data from the EBU (European Broadcasting Union). The contest’s global audience exceeds 160 million viewers across its three shows, making it one of the most-watched musical events in the world. For any artist, the exposure is as immense as the challenge.
After the festival, Melody already has plans: a new single, a tour across Spain and a strong desire to reconnect with her Latin American audience. “I’ve always felt so much love from Latin America,” she says. “This is a new chapter, and I’m thrilled to bring my music there again. They’re so heartfelt, so close. I want to dance and enjoy together.”
Thanks to SZA‘s debut album, Doechii was able to accept that the party was definitely over with an unsupportive ex years ago.
In a Cosmopolitan cover story published Monday (April 21), the Swamp Princess recalled how listening to Ctrl back when she was 18 enabled her to break things off with her then-boyfriend, who she says limited her creatively. “I was dating a guy who just wasn’t very supportive of my music, and it really stifled me,” she told the publication. “I stopped writing because he was just like, ‘That’s not cool.’ I took his opinion way too seriously when really he just didn’t get it.”
“I remember listening to SZA’s Ctrl for the first time, and it literally gave me the courage to break up with him,” Doechii continued. “I only bring that up because she inspired me to be vulnerable through my music in a way that I didn’t think I could be.”
The decision definitely paid off. Eight years later, Doechii is now the third woman to ever win best rap album at the Grammys — taking home the award in February for breakthrough mixtape Alligator Bites Never Heal — and was crowned Billboard‘s 2025 Woman of the Year in March. She’s also in another relationship now, this time with a woman, about which she told Cosmo, “My literal existence as a queer Black woman is a major contribution to the hip-hop genre.”
Trending on Billboard
“I’m speaking truthfully from a queer Black woman’s perspective, and being honest about my life through my lens is amazing,” the Florida native added. “That perspective is being highlighted, and we need queer perspectives.”
Doechii’s praise for SZA comes as the two women share slots high up on the Billboard Hot 100, with the former’s first-ever top 10 hit, “Anxiety,” sitting at No. 14 on the chart dated April 19 while the latter’s “Luther” collaboration with Kendrick Lamar spends its eighth week at No. 1. And in her cover story, the “Denial Is a River” spitfire also gushed about another leading lady in music: Beyoncé.
“I relate to her efforts as a businesswoman and her leadership,” Doechii said. “She is the embodiment of an eloquent leader. I look up to the way that she handles her job, her fame, and her fans. She is the ultimate showgirl and professional artist.”
See Doechii on the cover of Cosmo below.
HipHopWired Featured Video
CLOSE
Source: Ethan Miller / Getty / Travis Scott / WrestleMania 41
Travis Scott might want to stick to his day job because professional wrestling just isn’t working out for him, according to WWE fans.
Some celebrities, such as Bad Bunny, have had a significant impact on storylines leading up to the WWE’s largest pay-per-view events. Unfortunately for Travis Scott, the writing was on the wall with his involvement in the Cody Rhodes/John Cena feud, which sadly flopped; the rapper didn’t help sell it at all.
Travis Scott is best known for crafting hits in the studio, but as we found out during the Elimination Chamber PPV he isn’t good at pretending to deliver them in the wrestling ring when he apparently “accidentally” injured Rhodes, rupturing his eardrum after pimp slapping the professional rapper.
Things didn’t get better for Scott when he showed up at WrestleMania 41 to interfere in night 2’s main event featuring Cena and Rhodes for the WWE Undisputed Championship.
Scott made his way down the ramp to the ring, but this time Rhodes got the upper hand on the “SICKO MODE” crafter hitting him with his “Cross Rhodes” finisher and throwing him out of the ring.
That gave Cena enough time to hit Rhodes with the title, knocking him out and sealing the victory with a pinfall, becoming the WWE Undisputed Champion for the 17th time, a WWE record.
Social Media Body Slams Travis Scott & WrestleMania 41’s Lackluster Main Event
WrestleMania 41 was already facing negative press due to some controversial comments from Roman Reigns and Chief Content Officer Triple H regarding Donald Trump.
The lackluster main event didn’t help much, especially how things played out, plus Scott’s involvement, with wrestling fans taking to social media to express their disappointment.
“Travis Scott shit is STUPID,” Phase Hero host and producer, Brandon Davis, said on X, formerly Twitter.
Another post read, “Like what??? Why did Travis Scott have a 5 minute entrance in the middle of the match and WHERE IS THE ROCK????”
Welp, it looks like no one wants to see Scott in a WWE ring ever again.
You can see more reactions in the gallery below.
1. This fan didn’t get goosebumps seeing Scott
Olga Tañón was just 19 when she was invited to audition as a vocalist for a band. A self-proclaimed “rockerita” from a young age, she assumed it was a rock band. But when she arrived, she found a tambora and a güira instead of an electric guitar, bass, and drums.
“I think I’m in the wrong place,” she recalls thinking. “When I approached the bandleader, Ringo Martínez, he said to me: ‘No, this isn’t a rock band. This is a merengue orchestra.’ I replied, ‘But I don’t know how to sing merengue.’ And he came back with a challenge and told me: ‘Well, a good singer can sing anything.’”
The next day, she was already recording her first merengue song, “Fuera de Mi Vida” by Valeria Lynch, as part of the group Las Nenas de Ringo y Jossie.
Trending on Billboard
Nearly four decades later, the so-called “Mujer de Fuego” (Woman of Fire) from Santurce, Puerto Rico, is being honored with Billboard‘s 2025 Latin Women in Music Lifetime Achievement Award for her unparalleled influence as a singer in this Dominican genre.
Over her career, which began in the mid-’80s, Tañón has not only won hearts but has also shaped the tropical music style, earning a special place in Latin music history with her exceptional performance quality, unmistakable mezzo-soprano voice, and high-energy stage presence.
Since launching her solo career in 1992, 20 of her albums have entered Billboard’s Top Latin Albums chart, including two that reached No. 1: Llévame Contigo (1997) and Te Acordarás de Mí (1998). On the Tropical Airplay chart, she holds the record as the female artist with the most top 10 entries (29 in total), with hits like “Es Mentiroso,” “Cómo Olvidar,” and “El Frío de Tu Adiós,” to name a few.
“I’m beyond grateful for this beautiful Lifetime Achievement Award,” Tañón says. “It represents all the sacrifices made, all those nights that weren’t wasted but learned from, as I prefer to say. And for people to value you in such a way is a reminder that we’ve truly done the right thing: choosing what we wanted to do with our lives, and achieving it.”
“I hope many young women are inspired to pursue this beautiful [career], which isn’t easy but is wonderful,” she adds.
A Grammy and Latin Grammy winner, and also recognized this year by Billboard among the top 10 Best 50 Female Latin Pop Artists of All Time, Tañón looks back on her beginnings, reflects on her biggest achievements, and shares the secret to a long-lasting career.
Natalia Aguilera
When did you know you wanted to be a music artist?
I really started noticing the early inklings, as I call them, at 4 years old, when I moved to Levittown in Puerto Rico and was already singing a solo at the Coliseo de Toa Baja. I was in pre-kindergarten, and they held an event in that coliseum, and I was part of the choir. Did the teacher see something in me? I don’t know. But from there, I took opera lessons. I took advantage of all the services the public school offered because that’s where I studied.
What’s the first merengue song you remember as being special to you?
At home, we used to listen to “Sancocho Prieto” [by La Sonora Ponceña]. Honestly, I never thought I’d have a career in tropical music. I’ve loved the Dominican Republic since I was very young because the first, second, third, and fourth country my dad took us to visit was the Dominican Republic. But I only listened to merengue to dance to it. If I wanted to sing, I always imagined myself singing songs by Rocío Dúrcal or Isabel Pantoja, things like that. I never imagined I’d build an entire life honoring, as I say, a country that has given me so much. And I wasn’t even born there; that’s why I treat it with such respect.
So how did you end up making merengue music?
I was looking for opportunities in music. I was a “rockerita” in Spanish because I didn’t know a lick of English. After my dance teacher, [the famous Puerto Rican choreographer] Junito Betancourt, passed away, I was invited to an audition, and they told me it was for a band. So, I assumed it was a Spanish rock band. When I walked into the audition at Salón Villarreal, I saw a guy with a tambora and a güira, and I thought, “I think I’m in the wrong place.” But when I approached the bandleader, he said, “No, this isn’t a rock band. This is a merengue orchestra.” And I said, “What do I do? I don’t know how to sing merengue.” And he came back with a challenge and told me: “Well, a good singer can sing anything.” From then on, I haven’t stopped singing merengue.
What a happy mistake, right?
That’s what I call it, “a happy mistake.” Because the truth is, I don’t come from a famous family. I didn’t get a lucky break, you know, like a stroke of fortune. On the contrary, it was a lot of knocking on doors until something worked, and from there, I made the most of it. And the first thing I said was, “If I’m going to do a musical genre that isn’t from my country, I at least need to learn how to play a tambora.” And that’s how I started to learn more about the genre which has given me the life I have today — merengue.
Natalia Aguilera
Who did you look up to as role models? There weren’t many women in merengue at that time…
The image I always remember, and it was a dream that I was fortunate enough to fulfill by meeting her in person, was Rocío Dúrcal, with all those songs that stick with you even to this day — “Pues mira tú, como te ríes, como juegas tú” [she sings part of “Como Tu Mujer,” imitating the Spanish singer’s classic inflections] — with those always extraordinary vocal modulations. When I got into merengue, I didn’t really have an image of a woman in merengue because, at that time, there were duos and groups like Milly Quezada and her sister Jocelyn.
Obviously, there was Fefita La Grande from the Dominican Republic, who was always there with “Vamos a Hablar Inglés.” And I was also greatly inspired by many men who were active at that time.
As a woman in the industry, and in a genre like merengue, what has been the biggest challenge for you?
When you perform a musical genre that isn’t necessarily salsa, bomba or plena — the styles we’re known for in Puerto Rico — when you take on the responsibility of performing a genre that represents a country, you have to make an effort to learn a bit about it and approach it with great respect. I always tried to bring something important to merengue, with a lot of detail, care and love for everything I did.
How did you find your own voice?
Well, honestly, I don’t even know. They just told me, “Open your mouth and sing,” so I opened my mouth and sang. I didn’t have many references in that sense, so I wanted to add my own style. Obviously, when you’re trying to build a career, I always say that everything’s already been invented. But as long as you try to be as original and authentic as possible, I think you’ll do well.
What would you say are your greatest accomplishments in music?
The years I’ve spent making merengue. And also ballads, because Marco Antonio Solís gave me the chance to break into that world [in 1996 with the album Nuevos Senderos]. But specifically in merengue, the years and the applause — it’s a privilege I humbly say I still receive. I still feel like crying every time I come offstage after a sold-out show, even after so many years of my career. And we’re still doing it with a new tour. I think, wow, the people.
And how have you managed to stay relevant over four decades?
By not closing myself off to musical innovation. I think you have to be open to saying, “I can do this with a bit of influence from that.” I meet with producers. I meet with people I love and respect to write. I also open the door to new talent. I think staying relevant means not shutting yourself off.
Natalia Aguilera
The third annual Billboard Latin Women in Music special will air live at 9 p.m. ET / 8 p.m. CT on Thursday, April 24 exclusively on Telemundo, Universo, Peacock and the Telemundo app and throughout Latin America and the Caribbean on Telemundo Internacional.
Check out Billboard’s Latin Women In Music 2025 executive list here.
TOMORROW X TOGETHER will drop their new digital single, “Love Language,” on May 2. The upcoming song from SOOBIN, YEONJUN, BEOMGYU, TAEHYUN and HUENINGKAI was announced on Weverse on Monday morning (April 21) along with a digital cover image featuring a padlock with the password “Love Language” dialed into it. Explore Explore See latest videos, […]
State Champ Radio
