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Latin Women In Music

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Ángela Aguilar was destined for stardom.  
As third generation of the Aguilar musical dynasty — her father is Mexican music icon Pepe Aguilar, and her grandparents are the legendary Antonio Aguilar and Flor Silvestre — Ángela inherited the vibrant falsetto from her grandma, her grandfather’s knack for storytelling and her father’s passion for mariachi. She also inherited the great responsibility that comes from being part of a musical dynasty, especially when her last name is synonymous with regional Mexican royalty.  

“To know just how much my grandma and grandpa had to work for their success, it makes me proud of where I come from,” the 20-year-old singer-songwriter says from her home in Texas, where’s she’s spending a day off from touring with her father, her brother Leonardo Aguilar and her uncle Antonio Aguilar Jr., in the family’s Jaripeo Hasta Los Huesos Tour, which continues the legacy of the equestrian shows pioneered by her grandparents in the 1960s. “To this day, I don’t want to disappoint our last name. I want to do the best of my abilities to represent in a respectful way.” 

Ángela made her onstage debut at just three years old while she and her family accompanied her father on tour. Five years later, she released her first album at the young age of eight. It was a joint album with her brother Leonardo titled Nueva Tradición (which translates to New Tradition), that was powered by banda, mariachi and norteño sounds. At that moment, she says, she really understood that she was part of something bigger than herself.  

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“When I was three years old, I really thought the stage was my playground but when I released my first album, that was my realization of, ‘Oh my gosh, this is way bigger than I thought.’ I felt I had become less of an individual and more of an institution, and that was more important to me,” she explains.  

Born in Los Angeles, Ángela is a fixture in música mexicana, one of a handful of women that have forged their own path in the decades-old genre that continues to be overwhelmingly dominated by men. So far, she has landed three No. 1 songs on Billboard’s Regional Mexican Airplay chart — including “Dime Como Quieras” with Christian Nodal, which ruled the tally for five weeks — and four top 10 hits on Latin Airplay, including her first No. 1 on that chart, “Por El Contrario” with Leonardo and Becky G. She also scored a Latin Grammy best new artist nomination in 2018.  

On the touring front, she’s perhaps the most successful regional Mexican woman today with back-to-back U.S. arena tours (Jaripeo Sin Fronteras and Jaripeo Hasta Los Huesos) since her father launched the family show concept in 2018. In the middle of it all, in 2023, she went on her eight-date Piensa En Mí Tour, a solo trek across the U.S. 

“Singing is a very lonely career because you go on stage and sing in front of 20,000 people and then you go back to a hotel room and you’re all by yourself,” Ángela shares. “But I have the privilege of having three people in my family that experience the same thing I do every single night. I get to learn from them every weekend.”  

Most recently, Ángela released Bolero, a nine-song set produced by her father in honor of the genre that originated in the 19th century and inspires her ever expanding musical palate. With this LP, she doubles down on her effort to expose a new generation of fans to the styles that soundtracked her childhood home.  

“That’s been my message for many years; wanting the younger generation to appreciate the music,” she says with pride. “I think people often question whether I’m singing the music I want to sing but I am. Truly this is my biggest passion. And I’ve inherited not only the passion for it but also the love passed on from generations of fans because I’m part of this musical dynasty. You don’t need to be part of one but when you are, it’s beautiful.”  

It’s a sunny May afternoon in Miami’s lush Coral Gables neighborhood, and Camila Cabello greets me at her family’s one-story home accompanied by a small menagerie: four dogs — including her golden retriever, Tarzan, and German shepherd, Thunder — along with her rescued cockatoo, Percy.
Cabello is home “to recharge” amid a hectic few days that included time in California and will soon take her to New York for the Met Gala. But today, with her messy pigtails, Daisy Duke shorts and silver flip-flops, Cabello looks more like a college girl on break than a major pop star about to release her fourth solo album — a fearless artistic statement coming June 28 titled C,XOXO. Her father washes the driveway, her mother offers me cafecito, and her aunt plays with the dogs.

Cabello will receive the Global Impact award at Billboard’s Latin Women in Music, produced by and airing on Telemundo on June 9.

“Let’s go to lunch — I’ll drive!” Cabello exclaims as she grabs her tote. The 27-year-old got her license just two years ago and learned to drive during the pandemic; as we hop into her white Tesla — nicknamed “Tessie” — she admits that getting behind the wheel (with a good album or podcast on the stereo) is her favorite form of stress relief. She takes us to Pura Vida, one of her favorite local health spots, where we sit down outside with summer chicken bowls. “Girl, it’s this Met Gala coming up… I can’t wait to stuff my face after,” she jokes.

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With her still fairly new platinum blonde tresses (a fresh ’do she debuted on social media in February), Cabello largely goes incognito; some passersby seem to recognize her but are perhaps too shy to approach. Just one screams, “Camila, I love you!” — a reminder that while Cabello might periodically crash at her parents’ house, she’s still a global superstar. But while she jokes that her new look has the side benefit of granting her some anonymity in public, she explains that it has a deeper meaning.

“The voice that I found with my new album has this big baddie energy vibe,” she explains animatedly. “Part of that spirit is taking risks, not giving a f–k and doing whatever you want. I think the blonde was me staying true to that feeling. With the hair, it was like, ‘How do I tell people, visually, that this is my new era?’ Sometimes you need the physicality to let them know, ‘Oh, this is a new thing, a new character.’ ”

CD1974 courtesy of Retail Pharmacy top, SHAY earrings and rings.

Erica Hernández

On March 27, Cabello unleashed the first taste of what C,XOXO might bring: the Playboi Carti-featuring “I Luv It,” co-produced by Spanish hit-maker El Guincho (Rosalía) and Jasper Harris (Jack Harlow, Doja Cat). “I Luv It” samples Gucci Mane (“Lemonade”), interpolates a 2011 Rihanna loosie (“Cockiness [Love It]”) — and has a hyperpop aesthetic that marked a significant departure from the more conventional pop (and more recently Latin-influenced) sound that made Cabello a household name, first as a member of Fifth Harmony, then as a solo artist.

The unexpected track was also significant for another reason: It was Cabello’s first Interscope Records release after leaving Epic Records, her label home of nearly a decade where she had been since Fifth Harmony’s debut and released her first three solo albums — Camila, Romance and Familia — between 2018 and 2022.

Reactions to “I Luv It” on social media were mixed, and the song debuted and peaked at No. 81 on the Billboard Hot 100. Still, the song (and its somewhat unhinged vibes) piqued interest in Cabello’s next musical chapter. “The unpredictability of it is so different for me,” she says. “It’s such a kick-the-door-down moment, sonically, that it makes me feel strong and powerful. At least for me, in this stage of my life, it would feel so unfulfilling to just have a song that was big but felt like something that I’ve already done before. That brings me no joy. I would rather have a song that’s weird and be new territory to me.”

While the strangeness of “I Luv It” encapsulates Cabello’s new era, it was a different track that truly set the tone for the C,XOXO sessions. “At first, we played around with different genres, trying to find the sonic world the album lives in,” she explains. “ ‘Chanel No. 5’ really cracked open the album. For me, as a writer, that was the voice I wanted for the album: coy, cheeky and kind of devious.”

Gucci jacket, SHAY earrings, Harlot Hands rings.

Erica Hernández

On “Chanel No. 5,” Cabello sings between trippy piano interludes, her falsetto distorted, about being a “cute girl with a sick mind.” At one point she even raps — she has recently taken inspiration from “c–ty, cocky girl rap” like Flo Milli and Baby Tate, she explains.

“We realized we hit this key transition in the process,” says Harris, who co-produced the album, of the track. “That’s the first song we knew was very C,XOXO, and creating every song forward, we would ask if it felt as true as ‘Chanel.’ It was our north star.” (“Chanel No. 5” will be released pre-album drop as a fan track.)

Cabello, El Guincho and Harris devoted most of 2023 to working on the album — in New York, Los Angeles and the Bahamas but primarily Miami — and along the way, she had another creative epiphany: Her previous sets all had a why, a when and a who at their center, but never a where. C,XOXO would: It’s a love letter to Miami.

Cabello wasn’t always a Miami girl, but her journey here — a city full of sounds and culture enriched by immigrants — was a big part of what ultimately made her one.

Born in Havana, Cuba, she moved to Mexico City with her parents at age 6 and ultimately arrived in Miami with her mother (her father joined almost two years later). Her mom, who had been an architect in Cuba, worked in the shoe department at Marshalls; her dad washed cars at Dolphin Mall. Today, they run a successful contracting company called Soka Construction (named after Camila and her younger sister, Sofia).

In ninth grade, Cabello auditioned for The X Factor, where she eventually joined contestants Ally Brooke, Normani, Lauren Jauregui and Dinah Jane to form Fifth Harmony. With Cabello in the fold, the girl group — one of the most commercially successful ever — went platinum with its first two albums, in 2015 and 2016, and notched a top five Hot 100 hit with the Ty Dolla $ign-featuring “Work From Home.”

Erica Hernández

Amid Fifth Harmony’s success, Cabello started exploring opportunities outside the group. In 2015, she teamed with Shawn Mendes for “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” which cracked the top 20 of the Hot 100; the following year, she released “Bad Things” with Machine Gun Kelly, which went to No. 4. In December 2016, Fifth Harmony announced Cabello’s departure from the group on social media. “After 4 and a half years of being together, we have been informed via her representatives that Camila has decided to leave Fifth Harmony,” the other four members stated. “We wish her well.”

Cabello quickly flourished on her own: Her first three solo albums all reached the top 10 of the Billboard 200, and she has logged 21 Hot 100 entries as a solo artist, plus picked up two Latin Grammys. All the while, she continued notching star collaborations, like “Hey Ma,” an early-2017 teamup with Pitbull and J Balvin from the Fate of the Furious soundtrack. But her solo career really took off in August of that year with the Young Thug-featuring “Havana,” which climbed to No. 1 on the Hot 100 the following January. Her second Hot 100 chart-topper followed two years later: the steamy duet “Señorita” alongside Mendes, with whom she was in a much-photographed, two-year relationship.

Still, Cabello hasn’t yet delivered her lasting, full-length statement — the one that strongly defines her creative ethos and is entirely her own. Her latest album, 2022’s Familia, scored a top 40 hit with the Ed Sheeran-featuring “Bam Bam,” but it was Cabello’s lowest-charting solo project. (Her feature film Cinderella the previous year — a splashy starring role that could’ve further boosted her profile — received, at best, middling reviews.) In September 2022, Cabello left Epic to sign with Interscope — home to young stars like Billie Eilish and Olivia Rodrigo, who have become some of the biggest names in pop music by unapologetically establishing strong musical identities. With C,XOXO, Cabello is poised to potentially do the same.

“This was the first time she had the chance to decide on her own record label,” says Cabello’s longtime manager, Roger Gold of Gold Music Management. “[Epic was] wonderful and super supportive, but there’s a difference between being signed to a label without your own selection process and making decisions and then really getting to do that for the first time. It was a big deal for her to find people who deeply wanted to work with her, respected her and understood her. [Interscope] truly makes us feel like we’re the only artist on the label sometimes.”

“She’s the kind of artist who doesn’t compromise,” says Michelle An, Interscope Geffen A&M president and head of creative strategy. “It sounded like Camila wanted a label team that really gets into the weeds of everything. What are the big looks with the [digital service provider] partners? What is the strategy with radio? How are we implementing it internationally? She’s the boss of the boardroom, and she can tell us how she feels and how she wants to market. She’s really embracing the fact that she has a big team that operates like a boutique.”

No Sesso dress, SHAY earrings.

Erica Hernández

That level of label support, Gold says, allowed Cabello to treat C,XOXO as the kind of creative departure she had never explored before. “She’s feeling very confident in her womanhood, owning her own power,” he says, “and feeling like this is her time to bravely say the things she wants to say.” It may have been a sonic jolt and, to some fans, an outlier, but “I Luv It” was no red herring.

On C,XOXO, Cabello’s musical hallmarks remain — her hypnotic falsetto, her vulnerable ballads, her heartfelt songwriting — but in an entirely different sonic context that now blends hip-hop, Afrobeats, R&B, reggaetón and electronic music. They’re the sounds of Miami itself, vividly evoking the scenes of the city: driving past the clubs on Collins Avenue in Miami Beach or through bustling, artsy Wynwood on a busy weekend.

“So much of the inspiration for this album was driving, listening to music, rolling the windows down and hearing what people in the city are listening to,” Cabello says. “The voice she was using as a writer felt very much like the city itself,” El Guincho adds. “I thought it was a very interesting angle to have Camila represent her city strongly in a pop album context, which are usually very displaced and decentralized.”

Because the album was made almost entirely in Miami, Cabello says she looked at the city “with binoculars and extra-close attention. Sonically, it feels like it’s a Miami art piece.” For her palette, Cabello drew on a diverse group of collaborators to add unique colors, including Carti, Lil Nas X, The-Dream, fellow Floridians City Girls and BLP Kosher ­— and, most notably, Drake. That much-discussed (and paparazzi-snapped) jet ski adventure Drake and Cabello took in the Turks and Caicos Islands last year? They were finishing up a track together.

“He’s the f–king GOAT, so it felt like shooting for the stars,” Cabello recalls of initially approaching the Canadian rapper by sliding into his Instagram DMs. “I showed him the album when I felt comfortable enough and he really liked it. [The feature] came out of a nontransactional place. He had this idea of a song called ‘Hot Uptown,’ and it just felt like I was in the city. I was in Miami.”

ABLONDI dress

Erica Hernández

The flirtatious, Caribbean-infused track (which until their Turks meetup was, according to Harris, the only album cut created with a remote collaborator) isn’t Drake’s only C,XOXO appearance. On the nearly two-minute-long interlude “Uuugly,” sequenced immediately after “Hot Uptown,” he sings over soft synth beats and Cabello’s ghostly backing vocals. According to Harris, the interlude was Drake’s idea: “He wanted to do one more thing for the album.”

“Why does he have his own song? Because selfishly, I just want to hear Drake on my own album,” Cabello says with a laugh. “I love that for me — it’s like that rebellious mood. Who says I can’t do that? It’s Drake talking his sh-t.”

Another ballsy move for Cabello: This is the first time she has written all her lyrics and lyrical melodies for an album, taking full responsibility for the ideas and concepts behind them. “She’s fast, curious, has great instincts for melody, is strong with her opinions but also open for them to be challenged. She’s pretty much a freestyler with great first takes,” El Guincho says. The producer “really believed in me to take on the writing,” Cabello says. “That felt good and important to me. It makes me feel different when the whole body of work is purer, my thoughts and my taste in words. I think that’s why it sounds so cohesive, because it really feels like me.”

Today, at Pura Vida, Cabello pulls out her phone and opens a Pinterest board she created last fall. It has movie stills from Spring Breakers, girls wearing balaclava masks, long manicured nails, BMX bikes, photos of the city at night — all conjuring the quintessential DGAF Miami girl energy that Cabello telegraphs on the cover of C,XOXO, which features the sweaty-haired star with heavily mascaraed, just-out-the-club lashes, licking an electric blue lollipop, her tongue stained with its fluorescent color.

“She had specific memories of Miami and growing up there,” An says. “She described driving through the tunnels, with [their] very specific yellow lighting that you don’t see anywhere else. She described a specific hue of blue at the beaches and was focused on blue hour. The blonde hair was also a big deal. The party culture. She spent a lot of time trying to get us to understand the visual world of Miami.”

Erica Hernández

As she honed the album’s voice and vision, Cabello started dressing differently, always wearing lip gloss, fully embracing her bold new persona. “It was important for me on this album to feel that way,” she explains. “Pop music is so uncomplicated — it’s very one-toned. In a weird way, this album shows these chaotic, sometimes toxic scenarios, and I think we as humans are like that — we’re messy, complicated, super twisted.”

“There’s a lot of people that want you to be formulaic in this business,” Gold says. “There’s pressure in general to not rock the boat too much: If something isn’t broken, don’t fix it. Camila is not that type of artist.”

With C,XOXO finished, Cabello has some time to unwind and focus on herself. She finally started watching Breaking Bad; she’s currently into cold plunges; and she’s maximizing the time that she spends in chancletas (flip-flops).

“It’s when I feel the freest. I just want my toes to be free,” she confesses with a smirk. “I hate heels, I hate sneakers, I just want to be in chancletas all the time. This is actually the first time that I’ve gone to an interview in chancletas, and I feel that this album has given me the permission to do that.”

C,XOXO also allowed her to embrace her personal relationships. Simply being able to hang out with her friends at home enriched the creative process, she says: “That energy of being with your friends and that girl gang vibe felt so sick to me.”

That vibe particularly comes through on “Dade County Dreaming,” the final track she recorded for C,XOXO. Inspired by its namesake county, the collaboration with Miami hip-hop duo City Girls (who Cabello connected with through her sound engineer) captures the essence of both the album and who Cabello is today: a city girl herself, having fun and living life. The hard-hitting track — with its ’90s freestyle undertones, haunting piano lines and geographic name drops — was, Cabello says, “the missing piece on the album [because] City Girls represent Miami so hard.”

Erica Hernández

Just weeks ahead of releasing C,XOXO, Cabello tells me she doesn’t have any expectations. “Many things can happen, and they are out of my control,” she says. But she’s ready to face the feedback with the clarity and maturity she has cultivated in the 12 years since her Fifth Harmony debut.

“[When I was starting out], I wish I knew that not everybody is going to like me, and it has nothing to do with me,” she admits. “That affected me a lot in the beginning. When you’re that young all you want is acceptance and love, and you can’t understand when people don’t like you. You take it so personally, and it makes you feel like you’re doing something wrong. Once you get older, you realize that people’s reactions have nothing to do with you, and you don’t have to take it so personally and be affected by it. I’m way more at peace with it today.”

On an ordinary day, she’ll go to the beach, read a book, invite her friends to her condo in Sunny Isles for dinner, sip a Bacardi and sparkling water, put on a cute outfit and go dancing at Swan, a chic Euro-style spot in the luxurious Miami Design District, or Dirty Rabbit, an edgy Wynwood dance club. After a night out, she’ll make a mandatory stop at the 24-hour Pinecrest Bakery for some croquetas. Even if she’s tired, she pushes herself to go out and won’t hold back from dancing with a cute guy if she feels a vibe. “I’m living the Sex and the City life, but Miami,” she says with a laugh. But really, it’s the C,XOXO life.

“To me, it’s about going out more, going to more parties and just being a bit more fearless and rebellious,” she muses. “Before, I would go out and not care about what I looked like. If I felt kind of ugly, it was whatever — but now, I always want to feel pretty for myself. It’s about really enjoying life, and I always think to myself, that’s what sensuality is all about. It’s a sensory thing: enjoying the food you eat, enjoying putting on a few outfits in the mirror, enjoying the senses of being alive. It’s about taking in that baddie energy.”

This story will appear in the June 1, 2024, issue of Billboard.

Ana Bárbara and Kany García will be among the artists honored at the second edition of Latin Women in Music, Billboard and Telemundo announced today (May 8). The program will air exclusively on Telemundo on Sunday, June 9.

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Hosted by Jacqueline Bracamontes, the two-hour music special will celebrate Latina artists who “proactively work for positive change, inclusion, and gender parity in the music industry,” according to the press release. It will also stream on the Telemundo app and Peacock.

According to the initial list of honorees, the Queen of Grupera Ana Barbara will receive the Lifetime Achievement Award for her three decades of unparalleled influence in regional Mexican music and Latin pop.

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Throughout her career, which dates back to the mid-1990s, the San Luis Potosí native has not only conquered hearts, but has also shaped the regional style, earning a special place in the history of Latin music. “Ana Bárbara’s success has represented a powerful statement of female empowerment, struggle and resilience,” the statement said. “She managed to break down barriers, concepts and opened the way for other women in the industry, becoming an artistic inspiration, and a symbol of admiration and respect in the regional Mexican genre.”

Meanwhile, Puerto Rican singer-songwriter Kany García will receive this year’s Spirit of Change Award, which recognizes an artist who “drives positive change within music, society and beyond entertainment.” García — who just released her latest album, GARCIA — has used her talents and platforms to advocate for meaningful social causes, including support for LGBTQ+ rights, gender equality and social justice.

At last year’s Latin Women in Music event, honors were granted to those who’ve made significant contributions to Latin music and its industry. The recipients included included Shakira as Woman of the Year, Ana Gabriel as Living Legend, Thalia as Global Powerhouse, Maria Becerra as Visionary, Emilia as Rising Star, Evaluna as Tradition and Future and Goyo as Agent of Change.

In the coming weeks, Billboard and Telemundo will announce additional Latin Women in Music honorees in 2024.

The inaugural Billboard Mujeres Latinas en la Música (Billboard Latin Women in Music) — which celebrates Latin female artists, executives and creatives in the music industry — is right around the corner. 
An expansion of Billboard’s Women in Music franchise, the debut ceremony will honor seven Latina singer-songwriters including the first-ever Latin Woman of the Year Award to Shakira. 

“Shakira is the ultimate Woman in Music,” said Leila Cobo, Billboard’s chief content officer for Latin/Español. “Thanks to her, Latin women all over the world have been empowered to write and perform deeply personal music. She created a movement all on her own and continues to be more relevant than ever today, with grace, a deep tradition of giving back, and enormous talent. She is the definition of a Woman in Music.” 

The other honorees include Ana Gabriel, who will receive the Living Legend Award; Emilia, who will receive the Rising Star Award; Evaluna, who will receive the Tradition and Future Award; Goyo, who will receive the Agent of Change Award; Thalia, who will receive the Global Powerhouse Award; and Maria Becerra, who will receive the Visionary Award. 

Hosted by Ivy Queen and Jacqueline Bracamontes, the 2023 Billboard Mujeres Latinas en la Música will be taped at the Watsco Center in Miami on May 6 and will air exclusively on Telemundo May 7 at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT.

Below, count down to the televised event by listening to the ultimate playlist featuring music by the seven honorees and our host, Ivy.

Tickets to attend Billboard Mujeres Latinas en la Música live in Miami on May 6 are on sale now. For more information and to purchase, visit BillboardMujeresEnLaMusica.com. For the latest news, visit BillboardMujeresEnLaMusica.com, or follow Billboard on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter at @billboard. Join the conversation using #BBMujeresLatinas and visit BBMujeresLatinas.com for more information.

As part of its Latin Women in Music package, Billboard celebrates U.S.-based “Hall of Fame” executives with over 20 years of experience in the music business, working actively for change, inclusion and gender parity in the Latin music industry.

Marta ArtasoVp of catalog, Latin region, Spain & Portugal, Sony

Artaso leads Sony’s catalog strategy in the Latin Iberia region, developing innovative campaigns such as the coincidence of a Christmas campaign with the World Cup, which resulted in a 30% increase in Christmas catalog consumption. Artaso, who was previously based in Madrid, says moving to Miami in a leadership position was “transformative.” “It allowed me to have a more regional perspective and broaden my vision of how markets work, identify growth opportunities and strengthen my leadership in a multicultural and diverse environment.”

Leslie AhrensSenior vp of creative, Latin America, Kobalt Music

With a career that spans 20 years, eight of which have been at Kobalt Music, Ahrens says one of her “proudest and biggest achievements so far” is signing songwriters such as Karol G. “When we signed [her] in 2017, she was a relatively unknown artist. We believed in her talent, and to watch her grow and six years later become a global Latin female superstar is incredible,” she says. Ahrens credits Nestor Casonú, president of Latin America at Kobalt Music, for teaching her the publishing business since the day she started out as a receptionist.

Karol G, signed as a songwriter to Kobalt, is the first woman to reach No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with a Spanish-language album, Mañana Será Bonito.

Ricardo Arduengo/AFP/GI

Claudia ArcaySenior vp of entertainment, Loud and Live Entertainment

Arcay’s 20 years in the touring industry are reflected in her first decade as a promoter for NYK Productions, where she produced tours for Maná, Luis Miguel and Alejandro Sanz, to name a few; followed by eight years at WK Entertainment, where she was Carlos Vives’ tour manager and later promoted to business manager. Now, at Loud and Live, she manages multiple areas of the business with artists like Camilo, Farruko and Vives. Calling her grandmother, Carmen Gracian de Malpica, her biggest inspiration, she says: “She taught me that no goal was hard to achieve, that my voice matters and that I could be the career and family woman I always dreamt to be.”

Mary Black-SuarezOwner/president/CEO, MBS Special Events

With nearly four decades of experience in music and TV, Black-Suarez founded her own production and entertainment company, MBS Special Events, five years ago. Among the things that inspire her, she mentions good music and the opportunity to change someone’s life for the better, something she memorably remembers experiencing in the early 1990s, when she worked on an edition of the OTI Festival in the United States. “This singer-songwriter music contest gave me the first opportunity to change someone’s life,” she says. And it also changed hers: “After 30 years, I can reaffirm that I keep falling in love with this world and its stories.”

Mariauxy Castillo-VitaleHead of buzz marketing, Apple Latin America

“The creativity that exists in the Latino community” continues to inspire Castillo-Vitale. One of her passions, in fact, is “singling out new creators early on,” says the executive, whose job at Apple is to establish and develop working relationships with influential people in the Latin American region. Among her greatest achievements, she cites “unique” moments in her career, from her beginnings as a producer at MTV to working with Madonna on the Maverick label and with Ricky Martin’s management team to joining talent agency CAA. “I look at my résumé and I feel proud to be a Latina woman who has worked at iconic companies and with leaders in their categories.”

Sonia ClavellPresident/CEO, Clavell Marketing/Diamond Music; artist manager, Ivy Queen

As a teen, Clavell sold candy at stoplights in Puerto Rico. Now she runs Clavell Marketing — where she oversees public relations and promotions to marketing, label management and concert promotion — as well as record label Diamond Music. During a stint at Pina Records, the Puerto Rican executive worked with artists such as Don Omar and Natti Natasha, before becoming manager for Ivy Queen. “I don’t like to focus on my own personal/professional achievements,” she says. “The greatest satisfaction is to see targeted results in every project and see the artists I work with have a very successful career.”

Luz María DoriaVp/executive producer, Univision Communications; author

As vp and executive producer of Despierta América and Algo Personal con Jorge Ramos, Doria is one of the most influential figures on Hispanic TV in the United States and responsible for inviting countless artists to her shows. It is a task that she has carried out with determination since she joined Univision in 2002. But if something marked a before-and-after in her career, it was publishing her first book, La Mujer de Mis Sueños in 2016. “It gave me visibility and gave me the privilege of inspiring others with my own daily fight against fear,” says Doria, who in turn feels inspired by “people who dare and who get up early to try again because they weren’t able the day before.”

Yvonne DrazanVp, Latin division, West Coast, peermusic

Throughout her 20 years at peermusic, Drazan has been instrumental in growing the publisher’s Latin roster, which includes artists such as Chiquis, Gloria Trevi and Chayanne. Before joining peermusic in 2003, she was label manager for Gustavo Santaolalla’s label, Surco, whose releases included Juanes’ Un Día Normal and Molotov’s Dance and Dense Denso. “The artists I work with inspire me daily. I give them everything I have,” she says. “The weight of their careers sits squarely on my shoulders, and I don’t take that lightly.”

Peermusic’s list of songwriters includes female artists such as Chiquis, who records under the Fonovisa/Universal Music label.

Orlando Naranjo

Melissa ExpositoManaging director, Sony Music Central America & the Caribbean

Exposito began her career at Sony Music 12 years ago in brand partnerships, where she developed original content including the Pedro Capó documentary En Letra de Otro. In 2018, the film won Exposito a Latin Grammy for best long form video. Now, as managing director at Sony Music Central America & the Caribbean, she has propelled the label’s growth beyond the U.S. Latin market, helping marquee artists such as Manuel Turizo conquer new territories. Of her work ethic, Exposito says: “My grandmother taught me to work hard and make [my] dreams a reality. I’ll always be inspired by her.”

María FernándezCOO/executive vp, Latin Iberia, Sony Music Entertainment

Fernández is one of the most powerful women in the industry, but she rarely thinks about power. “For me, the real power is the one that doesn’t need to be shown,” she says. But she can see herself in the success of artists like Maluma, Camilo, Kany García and Shakira, and in the relationships that Fernández maintains with her superstars’ managers. Beyond Sony’s enormous success in 2022, Fernández is particularly proud to be the first Latina member of the Fender Musical Instruments board of directors. Among her many social projects, she supports Pine Villa Elementary School in Miami, which serves low-income children.

The career of acclaimed singer-songwriter Kany García, a five-time Latin Grammy winner, has been on the rise at Sony Music, where María Fernández serves as executive VP/COO Latin Iberia.

Alejandro Pazmiño

Gabriela GonzálezVp, U.S. Latin & Latin America, ASCAP

“My grandmother, a writer and historian, was the strongest woman I have ever known,” says González. “She helped me find my passion for Latin music, and I am grateful to have the opportunity to champion so many talented Latino creators in my position at ASCAP.” As vp, González also supports emerging composers. “We partnered with the ASCAP Foundation to create Tu Música, a scholarship for undergraduate and graduate students of Latino descent who plan to pursue a career in music,” she explains. Under her direction, they will launch Latin Beat, which will “bring together five writers to write together and spend a day learning about the industry with a Grammy-nominated writer.”

Rocio GuerreroGlobal head of Latin music, Amazon Music

“Never stop learning, taking risks and challenging myself” are words of advice Guerrero adopted early in her career. Before arriving at Amazon Music, Guerrero spearheaded many initiatives at Spotify, including launching the popular ¡Viva Latino! playlist. After a short stint at Warner Music Latin America, she joined Amazon Music in 2019 as its first-ever global head of Latin music. There, she has focused on identifying opportunities for emerging Latin acts and expanding the company’s global reach by launching Amazon Music LAT!N, a multiplatform hub that celebrates the nuances of Latin music.

Nerea IgualadorVp of digital business, Sony Music U.S. Latin

“One of the accomplishments I’m most proud of is how we’re finding support for Spanish-language music within environments that were previously exclusively dedicated to English-language music in the United States,” says Igualador, who oversees Sony’s relations with all digital platforms, and “working with editors who don’t know the language and being considered as equals,” she adds. For example, the release “Beso” by Rosalía and Rauw Alejandro became the cover of Spotify’s Today’s Top Hits playlist.

Paula KaminskyManaging director, GTS Universal U.S. Latin; manager, Sebastián Yatra

Inspired by her father, respected Argentine record executive Mario Kaminsky, who was “passionate about this business with a unique vision,” Kaminsky spent more than 15 years at Sony Music Latin, where she became vp of marketing. In 2012, she began a new and very different chapter. “Ricardo Arjona called me to set up his independent record label together. He gave me carte blanche to do what I wanted … and get to know the world of live music,” recalls Kaminsky. “That’s when I realized that my next stage would come from the management side.” The results have been brilliant. In 2022, Yatra sold out all 78 dates of his Dharma tour, sang at the Academy Awards and won his first Latin Grammy.

Martha LedezmaVp of marketing, Universal Music Latin Entertainment, Fonovisa/Disa

Ledezma has been leading marketing efforts for Fonovisa and Disa’s artists in both the United States and Mexico for more than two decades, and it all started with a rock album. In the early days of her career, Fonovisa hired her to oversee a tribute set for Los Tigres del Norte, featuring artists such as Café Tacvba and Molotov. “It was a total success,” she recalls of the release, which led her to be the band’s label manager. “Twenty years have passed,” she adds, “and this genre is now part of my life. I feel blessed.”

Rebeca LeónFounder/CEO, Lionfish Entertainment

Before León became a powerful figure in the Latin music industry, the Cuban descendant was inspired by Princess Leia of Star Wars. “Her ability to be in charge, to lead the army, to go into battle alongside men while remaining a woman through it all, was the first reference from a woman that made me say, ‘I want to be like her,’ ” she says. León has managed the careers of Latin superstars Rosalía, Juanes and J Balvin, among others. More recently, the Lionfish founder has dived into the world of film and TV. “This is the biggest risk I’ve taken to date,” León says, “but the one I’m most passionate about and excited about in my entire life.”

Jaime LevineCEO, Seven Mantels; manager, Shakira

Behind Shakira’s success in the past decade stands her manager, Jaime Levine, who has executed a strategy of hits and unique global actions that have kept the Colombian star relevant and at the top of the charts, in addition to closing worldwide agreements with brands like Burberry. Now, Shakira is being recognized as Billboard’s Woman of the Year at the Latin Women in Music gala. Her recognition comes after breaking 14 Guinness World Records and the success of her singles “BZRP Sessions, Vol. 53” with Bizarrap and “TQG” with Karol G.

Alexandra LioutikoffPresident, Latin America and U.S. Latin, Universal Music Publishing Group

As the only woman to head a major Latin music publishing division, Lioutikoff has been instrumental and visionary in signing new artists who have become huge stars. “Rosalía has reached even more achievements; Feid, whom we signed six years ago and have worked closely with to develop, has achieved enormous fame; Yahritza made herself known,” says the executive, who completed seven years at Universal and before that led ASCAP’s Latino operation. Her great inspirations, she says, are her mother and her husband. “I wouldn’t be where I am without them,” she says. UMPG won the BMI publisher of the year award for 2022.

Singer-songwriter Elena Rose, a Warner Music artist, has signed as a songwriter with Universal Music Publishing Group. She has written for stars like Rauw Alejandro and Becky G.

Christopher Polk for Variety

Iveliesse MalavéSenior vp of communications, artist and industry relations, La Academia Latina de la Grabación

Malavé firmly believes that “communications is an organization’s soul.” In her time with the academy, Malavé has focused on creating spaces for women within the industry “where we can thrive and stand out as leaders,” she says. One of her goals throughout her career has been to expand her professional knowledge beyond the traditional communications role. “I feel that this is appreciated and cultivated at the academy. We will never achieve gender equality unless there are more women in the rooms where these decisions are made, lifting others up along the way.”

Angie MartínezEntertainment attorney

“The idea of someone feeling so strongly invested in his or her art, doing whatever it takes to make sure it’s literally ‘heard,’ makes me want to fight harder for them and protect them as their legal representative, knife in hand,” says the entertainment lawyer with 20 years in the business. Martínez has championed some of the biggest names in Latin music including Camilo, Feid, Greeicy, Ozuna and Pitbull. “I recently had the honor and privilege of representing Luis Fonsi in the purchase of his editorial catalog, including ’Despacito,’ ” she adds.

Gaby MartínezSenior vp of marketing, Sony Music Latin-Iberia

“It is a privilege to be part of an artist’s career, whatever the end result,” says Martínez, who came to Sony in 2022 after 20 years at Warner Music. “A pivotal moment in my career was when I became CEO of Warner Latina,” she recalls. “It gave me a full vision of the business by giving me the opportunity to sign artists, negotiate contracts and manage all the teams.” She is also one of the first women to run a major Latin record label in the United States. “This fills me with pride,” she adds.

Mary NuñezVp of sync, U.S. Latin & Latin America, Warner Chappell Music

From her start in 2004 at BMG Production Music to working 11 years as director of music licensing and creative services at Sony Music Entertainment Latin/Iberia to now at Warner Chappell Music, Nuñez says “the music publishing world was where I had envisioned expanding my music career.” At Sony, she developed the Latin synch business line from ground zero and was key in making business development deals between Latin artists and brands, such as Romeo Santos and Dr Pepper’s two-year partnership. At WCM, she says synch placements have grown over 30% year to year since forming part of the team.

Colombian Greeicy had her first child with Mike Bahía, with whom she was on tour. She is signed as a songwriter with Warner Chappell Music.

Del Vecchio

Mia NygrenGM, Latin America, Spotify

Before joining Spotify 11 years ago, Nygren lived in Spain for nearly a decade working at Universal Music Group. The Swedish native also lived in Brazil for three years but now calls Miami home. “Collecting experiences has been a personal driver that has nurtured my professional opportunities throughout the years,” she explains. Nygren says she has seen the “streaming revolution” take over Latin America with now more than 100 million users in the region. “It allows Latin music to be heard and seen like never before.”

Delia OrjuelaGM, Mexican music, Warner Music

Recently, Orjuela began a new chapter in her career as GM of Warner Music Latina’s new Mexican music division. The executive, who is also the president of the Latin Songwriters Hall of Fame, has been making great strides over the past year-and-a-half in her new position. “We have signed legends like [Grupo] Pesado, who is celebrating their 30th anniversary this year, and newcomers like DannyLux, who opened for Coldplay and performed at Coachella this year,” says Orjuela, adding that Los Aptos will also perform at Lollapalooza 2023.

Clara PabloSenior vp of global marketing, WK Entertainment

With more than 20 years of experience — across areas such as public relations, marketing and now artist management — Pablo helped shape the careers of artists in her previous roles at Universal Music Latin Entertainment and Univision. In 2018, she joined the WK Entertainment team, where she has been instrumental in growing the careers of Maluma and CNCO. “My mother taught me to do what needs to be done to get the job done,” Pablo says of her biggest inspiration. “That’s something I still live by to this day.”

Luana PaganiPresident, SeitrackUS

Pagani was 18 years old when she began her career in the music industry — mostly compiling the label copy for new releases and assisting in the marketing budget for concerts in Europe. Later landing a job at Sony Music, she was part of the team that strategized the international careers of Shakira and Ricky Martin, among others. Now, at SeitrackUS, she takes pride in having developed the U.S. comeback of Los Angeles Azules and signing Alejandro Sanz, to name a few highlights. “Luckily after quite some years, after holding top positions at a label and reinventing myself in the management area, I don’t do label copies anymore and still go to shows with the same excitement,” she says.

Desiree PerezCEO, Roc Nation

At the helm of Roc Nation since 2019, and having spent a decade as its COO, Perez leads the company’s growth in music, management, new business development, touring, philanthropy and film/TV, among other areas. Among the greatest achievements of her career, the executive born in the Bronx to Cuban parents cites “bringing in Rihanna to start our artist management division.” What inspires her most: charitable causes.

Karina PuenteVp of promotion, Sony Music Latin

Puente has been a force behind Sony Music Latin’s dominance on the Billboard radio charts year after year. She is responsible for all of Sony’s Latin music airing on U.S. radio. “Seeing how [my] work directly impacts the history and development of an artist — whether it’s Shakira [breaking numerous] Guinness World Records on the charts or Gale reaching her first top 10 [on Latin Pop Airplay] — prompts me to look continually for different ways to grow their brand,” says Puente, who has been with the company for 18 years. “Latin music is more mainstream than ever; it’s an exciting time to keep breaking barriers and keep making history.”

Adriana RestrepoRegional director, Latin America & Caribbean, IFPI

Restrepo was named IFPI’s regional director for Latin America and the Caribbean in January after having served as president of Sony Music for the Andean region. The Colombian executive is one of the few women who have headed record labels in Latin America. Before Sony, she helmed the powerful independent Colombian label Codiscos. “I am inspired by spiritual awareness,” she says, “which unites me with transcendence, with my family, with the overwhelming young people who seek to transform the world and with the brave women who have made their way against all odds and who inspire so many others.”

Diana RodríguezFounder/CEO, Criteria Entertainment

In her 30-year career, Rodriguez worked her way up from radio promoter for indie ToCo Records to senior front-line product manager at Universal Colombia to marketing director for EMI Colombia, to name a few of her experiences. Most notably, in 2009, she became the first woman to be appointed senior vp of EMI’s U.S.-based, Spanish-language division, Capitol Latin, where she revitalized the label with her management style. Twelve years ago, she founded Criteria Entertainment — a full-service company based in Los Angeles, with offices in Colombia and Mexico, and home to the management division Mercado Negro. Rodriguez manages Mon Laferte, Enrique Bunbury, Draco Rosa, Flor de Toloache, Francisca Valenzuela and Diamante Eléctrico, among others.

Mon Laferte, one of the most dynamic artists on the scene, is signed to Mercado Negro, the management division of Criteria Entertainment, Diana Rodríguez’s company.

Medios y Media/GI

Shirley Rodríguez RiveraCo-founder/CEO, Mr & Mrs Entertainment

Rodríguez Rivera helped develop the careers of Romeo Santos and Calle 13 internationally as part of the Producciones Angelo Medina team, and credits Medina as the first person to offer her an opportunity at “a time when opportunities for women and younger people were extremely scarce.” Eight years ago, Rodríguez Rivera and her husband, José “Pompi” Vallejo, launched Mr & Mrs Entertainment, a global live entertainment, marketing and media company in Puerto Rico. She is also one of the founders of Premios Tu Música Urbano.

Amy RolandVp of synch and new business, Latin America & U.S. Latin, Sony Music Publishing

Roland began her career at Universal Music before coming to Sony Music Publishing 15 years ago. Today, she specializes in negotiating the use of music by composers such as Camilo, Tainy, Luis Fonsi, Maluma and Bomba Estéreo in advertising campaigns, film and TV, and she is proud of her efforts to achieve fair rates for the Latino catalog. No wonder her inspirations are women who overcome obstacles, like her great-grandmother, who left her home in New York to work as a doctor in India, “and artists and executives like Sylvia Rhone and Ivy Queen, who have shattered glass ceilings.”

Jennifer SarkissianGM, Industria Works/Nacional Records

Sarkissian recalls her first day on the job: “Tomas [Cookman] put a beautiful photo of Andrea Echeverri from Aterciopelados on my desk, and told me she was an incredible woman and that she doesn’t take any nonsense from anyone.” Seventeen years later, that same photo continues to inspire her: “A woman in Latin rock as a fierce advocate and promoter of women’s rights and voices,” she says. Sarkissian has continued to elevate Latin alternative music from its underground terrain to worldwide acclaim. For example, in LAMC’s first virtual year (2020), the conference gathered 10,000 registrants. Last year, it had over 220,000 unique online visitors, and its in-person edition exceeded previous years’ registrations.

Andrea Echeverri of Aterciopelados, who was signed to Nacional Records, has been a fierce advocate for women’s rights and voices, says Jennifer Sarkissian.

Felipe Santana

Emily SimonitschSenior vp of booking, West Coast, Live Nation

Simonitsch has been instrumental in leading Latin powerhouses like Alejandro Fernández, Maná and Marco Antonio Solís to become touring titans. Most recently, Maná had an unprecedented run at the L.A. Forum, where the band played a residency with 12 sold-out shows and 165,000 tickets sold, according to Live Nation. Marco Antonio Solís’ reunion with Los Bukis led to a historical stadium tour that landed at No. 6 on Billboard’s Top Tours of 2021. “I’m proud of promoting artists early in their careers and watching them grow,” says the Los Angeles-based executive, who cites her mother as her biggest inspiration.

Camille SotoCEO, GLAD Empire

Soto graduated from law school, but it was the death of her cousin, artist Get Low, that inspired her to launch GLAD Empire 16 years ago — a resource for artist development, digital content distribution, promotion and marketing but overall “with a focus on helping independent artists with limited opportunities, just like him,” she says. With the experience and guidance of her partner, veteran rapper MC Ceja, GLAD released the smash “Te Boté Remix” (produced by the late Flow La Movie) by Nío García, Casper Mágico, Ozuna, Bad Bunny, Nicky Jam and Darell. In addition to releasing music from artists such as García and Mágico, she is helming the career of Anuel AA.

Elena SotomayorExecutive vp of marketing, branded entertainment, CMN

For more than two decades, Sotomayor has been a fundamental part of CMN, a Latino event promoter linking top brands with top tours and artists. Inspired by Henry Cárdenas (CMN’s founder) and by her mother, who left a career in Colombia to bring her daughters to the United States, she has also devoted herself to giving women and girls opportunities through the Maestro Cares Foundation, which she co-founded with Cárdenas and Marc Anthony. “To keep inspiring women is as important to me as it is to uplift the women who have worked with me,” she says.

Laura TesorieroSenior vp, Latin Iberia, The Orchard

If there’s something that inspires Tesoriero, it’s change — “change in technologies, change in musical genres, changes in business models. This challenges and fascinates me,” says the executive, who started in the music business in 1991 and joined The Orchard in 2004 as the industry was beginning to shift to digital. “Coming from the physical world, believing that the future was digital made all the difference,” she adds. “At that time, I made a very big effort so that Latin American music crossed the oceans and began to be part of the digital world.”

Patty VegaFounder, Chaf Enterprises

Vega has managed Chayanne for 19 years and worked with him for nearly three decades, keeping one of the most extraordinary careers in Latin music current and relevant. The Colombian executive, known for her negotiating skills, started in management when women were scarce in the field. “But I stayed,” she says. “The most complicated thing is to always say, ‘What are we going to do?’” This year includes a new album, campaigns with big brands and news of a tour. “What Chayanne does, he does with love and passion. He still has that respect for his career despite those years.”

Elsa YepCOO, Universal Music Latin America & Iberian Peninsula

A testament to Yep’s focus on consolidating Universal’s “360 powerhouse reach” is that the label’s marquee talent — including established superstars and rising stars alike — have experienced major international success. Karol G made history with Mañana Será Bonito, the first all-Spanish-language album by a woman to peak at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. And Feid’s first headlining U.S. run sold out in a matter of minutes. Her biggest inspiration: “My grandfather was a visionary and ahead of his time,” she says. “His boldness while embracing social and personal connectivity still inspires me today.”

Celeste ZendejasVp of creative, SESAC Latina

Throughout her 22 years in this ever-evolving industry, one thing has remained a constant for Zendejas: her passion to “continue advocating” for Latin music and culture, the Los Angeles-based executive says. Zendejas, who joined SESAC in 2008, has been leading the company’s Latin creative efforts by overseeing the affiliations of superstar songwriters such as Nicky Jam, Eden Muñoz, Luciano Luna and Christian Nodal. Last summer, SESAC Latina signed a worldwide deal with sibling trio Yahritza y Su Esencia, whose debut single, “Soy El Único,” peaked at No.1 on the Hot Latin Songs chart in 2022.

Yahritza Martínez, of Yahritza y Su Esencia, is represented by the collective management company SESAC Latina, helmed by Celeste Zendejas.

Rita Feregrino

These four innovative executives under 40 are already emerging as industry leaders.

Alessandra AlarcónPresident, SBS Entertainment

As the first woman to head SBS’ live-events division, Alarcón brings a bicultural and bilingual perspective to a Hispanic media powerhouse, and with it, increased profits.

Stephanie ChopurianPartner, Greenberg Chopurian-Valencia & Associates

As a partner in her own legal firm, Chopurian stands out for representing next generation artists such as Myke Towers and Ovy on the Drums, as well as veterans such as Arcángel and De La Ghetto.

Tania DorantesStrategic partner manager, music label partnerships, Meta

Dorantes develops strategies and alliances in addition to educating artists, managers and labels in the United States and Latin America on the best uses of Meta to advance music and careers.

Gaby HerreraArtist manager, Prince Royce, WK Entertainment

One of the few women managers in the realm of urban and tropical, she has led Prince Royce’s career for six years and has negotiated alliances with major brands.

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The work of these five veterans in other countries directly influences the performance of artists in the United States.

Chris FalcãoManaging director, Latin America, Ingrooves

After running Ingrooves in Brazil, Falcão now oversees Ingrooves throughout Latin America, signing artists from various genres, countries and levels of prominence to diverse types of contracts.

Inma GrassFounder/COO, Altafonte

Based in Spain, the independent label Altafonte has expanded its operations in Latin America, earning 26 Latin Grammy nominations last year.

María RamírezCo-founder, Queen Street Talent

From Colombia, Ramírez leads marketing campaigns for artists throughout the region, including Andrés Cepeda and Juliana Velásquez, winner of the Latin Grammy for best new artist in 2021.

Sandra JimenezDirector/head of music, Latin America, YouTube

Based in Brazil, Jimenez oversees YouTube’s music operation for Latin America.

Rosa LagarrigueFounder, RLM

Lagarrigue founded RLM in Spain in 1984 as the only woman with a management company for Spanish-speaking artists. Today her clients include Raphael, Rozalén and Vanessa Martín.

Billboard’s first Latin Women in Music list features 40 U.S.-based executives who have over 20 years of experience in the music business. It also includes four rising executives under age 40 and five international executives whose work has impact on the U.S. music industry.

This story is part of Billboard‘s Mujeres Latinas en la Música package. Tickets to Billboard‘s Latin Women In Music can be purchased here.

This story is part of Billboard‘s Mujeres Latinas en la Música package.
Maria Becerra‘s charisma and versatility have made her a force to be reckoned with. Since emerging on the international scene of the ever-expanding global Latin music community with her debut album Animal two years ago, the Argentine singer-songwriter continues to chart in her native Argentina and beyond with her unique style and unmistakable voice.

With La Nena de Argentina (2022) — her most personal and multifaceted album to date — she has garnered more than 301 million plays on Spotify alone. Her delectable mix of pop, cumbia villera, bachata and reggaetón, with lyrics that speak of love, heartbreak and female empowerment, has resonated with a growing and diverse audience. In her own words, her goal is to deliver “quality music with songs that transcend time.”

Becerra started as a YouTuber as an adolescent and was nominated for a Latin Grammy for best new artist in 2021. To date, she has achieved three entries on Hot Latin Songs, including her hit with “Qué Más Pues?” with J Balvin, as well as two top 10 entries on Latin Airplay (the No. 1 hit “Te Espero” with Prince Royce, and “Éxtasis” with Manuel Turizo at No. 9) and five entries on Latin Rhythm Airplay.

La Nena de Argentina will be honored as a Visionary at Billboard‘s inaugural Latin Women in Music gala, which will air on Telemundo on Sunday, May 7.

Billboard: What does being a visionary mean to you?

Maria Becerra: I really feel that you have to have a lot of confidence in the project, and a lot of people around you who also trust, who push forward and constantly contribute ideas. I am a very active person, a person who shoots ideas, who wants to generate new concepts, who wants to make new and different genres. I think it goes more on that side, in the sense of not stagnating and always thinking about new things and looking to the future.

It’s been two years since you released your debut, Animal. What have you learned since then that you value today?

What I value most is having learned to work. I was very young when all this happened to me. I started with music at 17, and at 19, suddenly I was living alone, I had a career, I had a salary, I had to record myself in the studio, do publicity, photos, interviews. And today, at 23, I can say that I love infinitely what I do and I make a very long trip of a month away from my family, but I’m not bad. [Before, I was] “No, no, no, no, I can’t handle this, I can’t handle this pressure, I can’t handle this job.” Today, yes, I am 23 years old, but I am an empowered woman, I am independent, I go out, I go to another country, I go for a month, I go to work, I go to learn about culture, and to make music with producers.

I am happy because my self-esteem goes up incredibly, because I am working for what I love. Having understood that, I feel that it was what has given me answers and peace of mind.

Before you became a singer, you started making videos on YouTube and achieved success on the platform at a very young age. Tell me about those beginnings.

It was around 11, 12 years old. Actually, I started on YouTube when I was very young. I made videos singing covers: One Direction, Whitney Houston. And I would upload them to YouTube, I was happy. Very few people saw them. I did a lot of casting also online. When I was about 15, I had a video that went super viral, and then I said “this is my moment.” It was four years in which I uploaded videos all the time, blogs, videos [of me] singing, doing sketches. I recorded them, I edited them myself, I was always very autonomous. And the people were encouraging me to “leave the channel aside and dedicate yourself to music.” It was at 19 that I decided to dedicate myself [to music] professionally and that’s when it all started.

Seizing the moment!

Totally. If the world is not giving me the opportunity […] I’m going to do it myself. I think it is something that, thank God, is happening to the new generations because of all the social networks, because of all the massification there is with the networks, with everything. So, luckily we can undertake it, and we can make ourselves known.

How did you get the nickname La Nena de Argentina?

La Nena de Argentina came up on a song “Animal” with Cazzu. At the end of the song, when we were recording it in the studio, we said: “Let’s record some taglines to finish.” She threw one at me, “Las nenas de Argentina” (or Argentina’s baby), but people didn’t understand that she had said “Las nenas de Argentina” (plural). They started to call me “La Nena de Argentina”, and it stayed.

How did you feel when your songs started appearing on the Billboard charts?

Unbelievable. Billboard is a very important media in music. Being part of a list or an interview is extremely important, it is a very nice recognition for any artist. I think that since I was a little girl, you have Billboard in your head, because your favorite artist appears on Billboard. So it is something very gratifying.

Tell me about your musical inspirations.

My biggest inspirations have always been the great women in music — Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey, Amy Winehouse, Montserrat Caballé, Ariana Grande, Rihanna. I was always a big fan of women with big voices, with incredible stage presence, with vocal strength, in their gestures, in their performance, in everything. Their strong way of being, so empowered, filled me with desire.

You have several tattoos, which was the last one and what meaning does it have for you?

The last thing I tattooed was an upside down wine glass. I did it with my manager and his daughter. It’s a shared tattoo. We were drunk, actually. We had a release party for my song “Automático,” and we brought tattoo artists. There was a lot of alcohol and we said, “Shall we tattoo something together?!” “Well, come on!” “The glass!” we said, because he [her manager] likes wine. It’s nice to have it shared, I think that’s the important thing.

Do you have any hidden talents that the public doesn’t know about?

I am a very good cook. I make very good pot roast, mother’s food. I love to make potato pie, polenta, pasta and lots of it. I cook with a lot of love.

Tickets to Billboard’s Latin Women In Music can be purchased here.

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This story is part of Billboard‘s Mujeres Latinas en la Música package.
The first person to believe in the musical talent of María Guadalupe Araujo Yong, later known as Ana Gabriel, was her grandfather, Roberto Yong. Born in China, his sister had been an opera singer, and it was he who taught the little girl to control her breathing, to take care of her voice, to respect the stage. It was also he who told her: “Among the green apples, try to be the red.” 

She did so, and against all expectations — she was told, since the very start, that her signature hoarse voice was “anti-aesthetic” — she landed 27 albums on Billboard’s Latin Pop Albums chart (the woman with the most titles on this list) and six No. 1s on Hot Latin Songs, including megahits “Ay Amor” and “Evidencias,” both written by her, just like 90% of her hits. 

On the exclusive Billboard Greatest of All Time Latin Artists chart, Ana Gabriel is currently listed at No. 25. 

Today, in her 60s, the Mexican singer-songwriter is still a force of nature. Her current Por Amor a Ustedes world tour, which spans 36 arenas across the United States, Mexico and the Dominican Republic, is sold out, and she’s planning a performance at the historic Olympia Theater in Paris — a perfect venue for a living legend. 

Billboard: I can’t think of any other Latina who at this age continues to tour the world’s stages with such success. Why do you do it? 

Ana Gabriel: Because there is an audience behind me that is my base, that takes me by the hand in what I give them as a person, as a human being, as a singer, as a composer. Because there are no lies when I’m onstage. I am the same: the one below, the one who is talking to you right now, and the one onstage; the only difference is one has makeup and one doesn’t. 

This audience is responsible for making me a living legend. They’ve supported me for many years because I have not lied to them. They know me so much, so much, so much that when I keep my distance or silence it is because they know that I’m taking time to recycle myself as a human being. 

You told me that you had been working on your spiritual side for some time. Tell us a little about that. 

Over the past 25 years I have reaffirmed that quest. The years open up other fields for you; they turn on little lights and turn off others. But my spiritual search comes from childhood because of the close and direct contact I had with my Chinese grandfather. He talked to me a lot about how they handled Zen, the center. How sometimes we have to control ourselves and how we have to learn to control ourselves. Because it is one thing to have character, and another to be strong in character. You have to define it. And that has taken me a lot of work. The only thing I can assure you is that I never stood on a little brick. I always kept my feet very much on the ground to know how tall I am.

Was your grandfather the one who taught you to sing? 

My grandfather is the one who gave me advice as a singer, how to position my voice, how to breathe so as not to hurt my vocal cords. He gave me the exercises that I didn’t understand when I was very young, and after standing on [a stage] for the first time in 1974, I realized what he was teaching me. He taught me to read aloud with a pencil under the tongue, for diction. 

Did he actually see you perform onstage? 

He did see me recording, but not standing on a stage. [Even so,] he was quite moved to see me and understood that I was born for that. My great inspiration to sing was my grandfather. He spoke to me a lot about the spiritual, about that side I must protect. To say thank you before stepping on the stage and to ask permission before entering it. 

It took you 10 years to get a label to believe in you. Why? 

It didn’t take me 10 years to sign with a label, but rather for someone at the label to believe in the voice, to believe in what Ana Gabriel brought to the table and support it. They said: “It’s just that your voice is strange.” They called it “anti-aesthetic.” It was the complete opposite of what was heard at that time, which was very high-pitched voices, and I arrived with the complete opposite. Even though my voice is very hoarse, I have a very high range. That’s what they didn’t understand. But also the record companies, to say it openly, have always been risk-averse. If one song worked, they want another one just like it. And as I learned from my grandfather: Try to be the red apple that stands among the green ones. Being different requires hard work, but if you have patience, you can do it. 

Do you consider yourself a composer first and then a performer? 

I identify as both. There is a very great duality. In fact, when I started composing I was ashamed to show my music. I said, “How am I going to open my spirit? How am I going to open my soul to people I don’t know? I prefer to sing songs by other composers.” But my first composition came along and that’s when I realized that what the public liked were my songs. Although I perform songs by other composers, 90% of my recordings are my own compositions, music and lyrics.

“Ay Amor” was your first No. 1 on Hot Latin Songs. Do you remember what you felt at that moment? 

I thanked God. I thanked my parents. My family. And again, the public. Without the public you cannot reach those levels. I never said, “Oh, I finally made it.” In fact, I must say, I have not made it yet. If I think I’ve already made it, I’m going to just sit in a comfortable spot and won’t allow myself to grow. You can’t just settle. 

At the end of this great tour, what’s next for you? 

First of all, continuing to be healthy. I have to take advantage of the fact that I can still sing, I can still move, jump onstage. What I don’t want is to fail the public onstage. When my tour in Europe is over, I’m going to pull myself together a bit and get back in the studio. In fact, we’re going to start recording a song that I perform in honor of two departed friends: Juan Gabriel and Rocío Dúrcal. And [I’m going to] plan what I’ll be doing at the Olympia in Paris — to appear there is one of the biggest dreams of my life. [After Lola Beltrán and Chavela Vargas,] I would be the third Mexican woman to step on that stage. 

Tickets to Billboard‘s Latin Women In Music can be purchased here.

This story is part of Billboard‘s Mujeres Latinas en la Música package.
On a recent Sunday in Miami, Thalia waits for me at the entrance of Sony Music’s 50/20 recording studio, dressed in sweatpants and a T-shirt, with a baseball cap over her almost makeup-free face, to talk about her new project, Thalia’s Mixtape El Soundtrack De Mi Vida.

“You don’t know what this project means!” she tells me, brimming with emotion. “It’s that mixtape back from when I was a teenager! Those songs that were the soundtrack of my life were rock in Spanish.” 

With or without makeup, in front of or behind the camera, Thalia always speaks with exclamation points — her voice rises and falls in a narrative arc that keeps her listener in a state of engagement. It is an essential quality that has permeated the work and the very essence of Ariadna Thalia Sodi Miranda, from her days as a child TV actress, to her tenure with pop group Timbiriche in the 1980s, to her rise to queen of soap operas and then, to queen of the Billboard charts. Since her 1995 debut album, En Éxtasis, Thalia has placed 13 top 10 hits on the Top Latin Albums chart, as well as four No. 1s. 

Now, she blends visual and musical content, past and present, on the 11-track album Thalia’s Mixtape (out April 28 on Sony Music Latin), for which she covered not only her favorite songs — including Soda Estéreo’s “Persiana Americana,” Aterciopelados’ “Florecita Rockera” and “Duélveveme a Mi Chica” by Hombres G — but also sought out their authors, including Charly Alberti and David Summers, for the recording of both the songs and new music videos. The audiovisual product, Thalia’s Mixtape El Soundtrack De Mi Vida, is available as a three-episode series on Paramount+. 

“My great challenge as an artist is to give the best quality to my audience. The experience, the fun, entertaining them, singing for them, expressing myself through all kinds of musical genres is part of the package,” says the artist, who will be honored with the Global Powerhouse award at Billboard‘s inaugural Latin Women In Music event, airing May 7 on Telemundo.

How do you feel about being a part of the first group of Latin Women in Music honored by Billboard? 

I feel proud, I feel honored; I feel that I belong to a group of extremely talented, powerful women, full of vigor, full of that strength that is so contagious. It’s that sisterhood, that friendship; it is that family that we have built for years that includes singers, producers and executives. 

Who inspired you as a child? 

My mother! Yolanda Miranda de Sodi, period. Setting gender aside, that person’s soul was so powerful that she spoke face to face with any man, with a security and strength that at that time, in that patriarchal system, was impossible. And this woman went against the tide. Also, we are five sisters. My father died when I was 6 years old, so I grew up in a matriarchy. Everything was woman power. I tasted it, I lived it in my house. Women first, women above. 

Did you feel embraced by her? Empowered? 

We have to find a word other than “empowered.” What other word? 

Powerful? 

A powerful woman! A woman with power! A being with power. That’s it.

You stand out, among other things, for having helped many women in your career by recording with artists on the rise. Why have you done that? 

It has always felt good for me to do it. From my perspective, we are better together. If you look good, I will look better. If it’s good for you, it’s good for me too. That’s how I think, and especially when it comes to young, female artists. They go against many prejudices, and in an industry dominated by men it’s important for them to have another woman to support them. 

You opened doors that were closed. Was there a particularly difficult moment? I remember reading that when you were a teenager you were scolded by a TV host on-air. 

Yes. Just imagine the patriarchal system that we lived in, and that still exists. A girl who had just released her first song, her first album, with stars in her eyes, and suddenly they tell you, live: “You’re ordinary, you’re cheap, how can you wear that makeup?” If something like this happened to you now, you’d say: “Wow, there are millions [of women] behind me, and you stop right there.” But at that time there was a system that allowed everything, and everything was normalized. 

You are heavily involved in the production aspect of both music and video. Why? 

When I went solo, I became 100% involved in my videos, in the mix, in the composition. Remember, I lived for many years under the telenovela regime: “Stand here, stand there.” I was up to here with instructions. Now I’m the one calling the shots. And I know what my audience wants to see from me, and I have an inkling of what young people want. 

What advice do you give up-and-coming artists? 

To be themselves. Don’t be afraid of not fitting. It’s OK not to belong, because there is only one person like you on the planet. And we have this society where we’re constantly taught that you have to fit in the pack. I have news for you — you can be yourself and you will find your audience, and you will find your niche, and you will find your expression. 

What’s your mantra? 

I don’t know if it’s a mantra, but it’s faith. I believe that God is always giving me light. That is my gift. 

At the Academy Awards, Michelle Yeoh, at 60, accepted her Oscar for best actress and said: “Ladies, never let anyone tell you you’re past your prime.” What do you think of those words? 

One hundred percent! I believe that life is a constant evolution. Everyone is going to die, everyone is going to grow old, we are all going to depend on each other. That’s life. And if you go there, do all you can to enjoy the trip. Do everything that challenges you, do everything that gives you a vision, do everything that you fear. 

Are you in your prime? 

I am always in my prime! It’s a constant prime state of mind. 

Tickets to Billboard‘s Latin Women In Music can be purchased here.

This story is part of Billboard‘s Mujeres Latinas en la Música package.
Gloria “Goyo” Martínez doesn’t just make music: She represents a radiant light for a global community she has long been championing. Both she and her music aim to uplift Afro-Latino/as, who for decades have been under- and misrepresented both in her native Colombia and the world.

The Colombian singer-songwriter, who boasts queenly bearing and an eclectic and elegant fashion style, forged her reputation by lending her impassioned vocals to socially conscious hip-hop fusion collective ChocQuibTown. As a solo artist, her success continues to place her at the forefront of a soulful Latin hip-hop movement that elevates Afro-Latina women.

“I come from a country where a lot of people have been working to give visibility to our culture, to move forward on some issues that are difficult in our community and as a country,” says Goyo. “So I feel very happy to be able to tell my story and have young girls tell theirs.”

But Goyo’s drive goes beyond her own experience, and she constantly raises her voice on behalf of others.

“Inclusivity, in one way or another, is very important. Working for equity and equality not only for the rights of Afro-Latinos and women, but also for human rights,” says Goyo, who will receive the Agent of Change award at the first ever Billboard Latin Women In Music gala, airing May 7 on Telemundo.

“I think ChocQuibTown has an important part within that history, and it’s something that fills me with a lot of pride, not only for being successful as an artist and singer, but as a person.”

Last year, Goyo released her first solo album,En Letra de Otro, a tropical rap/soul outing in which she pays tribute to iconic artists like Tego Calderón, Shakira and Carlos Vives.

The full-length release was accompanied by an HBO special of the same name that shows her origins in the small and humble town of Condoto, in the state of Chocó, on Colombia’s Pacific coast. “For me it was very important to show a little bit of Gloria’s world. To be able to show them where I was born with a lot of sincerity, to show my family, my aunts, where I come from,” she says.

Goyo rose to fame in 2010 as the passionate voice of ChocQuibTown, along with her husband, Carlos “Tostao” Valencia, and brother Miguel “Slow” Martínez. Together, they have captivated audiences since their worldwide smash hit, “De Donde Vengo Yo,” which won them a Latin Grammy for best alternative song. With their six-album discography, the Afro-Colombian trio have built a reputation for conscious lyrics that speak to their pride for their heritage with a genuine, streetwise sensibility.

“I think I’ve earned a beautiful place because I’m a woman, and I have my voice. There are songs [by ChocQuibTown] that became part of many people, and many couples, especially when they feel that pride of being Colombian and feeling represented.”

The transition from ChocQuibTown — her school, her family, as she describes, and with whom she still works — to her own solo project was a natural one.

“The timing became a little difficult, but the truth is that we always thought it was important that the three of us could make a transition to be able to show our own sensibilities, our own experiences, and to be able to do other things,” she says.

Goyo comes from a musical family. Her late grandfather was a bolero player, and her father, who owned an impressive vinyl collection, played his records at neighborhood parties and often entrusted his daughter with the song selection. Her favorite was “Goyito Sabater” by El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico, which earned her the nickname “Goyo.” She is also the niece of the great Jairo Varela, founder and leader of the legendary Grupo Niche.

“I feel like a fan,” she says, referring to her uncle and his famous group. “For me, it was always super exciting to have a person like him as an example when it came to writing. That’s why I’m also a composer and write what I sing, and that seems super important to me,” she adds. “As a family we are also safeguarding a legacy that is not only the family’s but belongs to all Latinos who feel how important Grupo Niche and Jairo Varela are to our history.”

Throughout her career, Goyo has advocated the importance of Afro-Latina visibility in the music industry by speaking on the subject in interviews and on social media. What it means to her to represent her Afro identity to the public is “being able to shake off a lot of myths that ‘this can’t be done.’ ”

“I feel like a person who has opened doors, who motivates other artists or other people, just as I am also motivated by many artists,” she adds. “I’m very impressed when sometimes they send me photos of girls who dress like me, or give me as an example of a woman who fulfilled her dreams. And it’s paradoxical, because I’m still fulfilling dreams.”

Tickets to Billboard’s Latin Women In Music can be purchased here.

This story is part of Billboard‘s Mujeres Latinas en la Música package.
When their baby, Índigo, turned 40 days old, new parents Evaluna Montaner de Echeverry and Camilo Echeverry packed their bags and embarked on their first tour as a family of three. “She fits in perfectly with this [tour] life, thank goodness,” says Evaluna proudly of her daughter, the superstar couple’s first child. 

It’s late March and the multifaceted artist — singer-songwriter, actress and director — is home in Miami after wrapping up the first leg of the couple’s ambitious De Adentro Pa’ Afuera world tour, which kicked off last year. “The crew became Índigo’s second family.” She adds, “It’s just so much fun to see her surrounded by many people that love her.” 

Evaluna, 25, and who goes by her first name only, grew up in a similar environment. Her father is prolific singer-songwriter Ricardo Montaner, her mother is director Marlene Rodríguez Miranda — who directs all of Ricardo’s music videos — and her brothers are recording artists Ricardo and Mauricio Montaner (known as the duo Mau y Ricky). 

While Evaluna’s name is often seen side by side with those of her famous husband, siblings and parents, she’s a powerhouse in her own right. With a distinctive soothing voice that has captured more than 4 million monthly listeners on Spotify and 4 million YouTube subscribers (as well as 21 million followers on Instagram), her ability to balance life as a Montaner (on- and offscreen), in addition to a marriage, a recording and directing career and now motherhood on the road, embodies a different kind of pop star: One that makes family part of her success. 

“It has been wonderful to grow up in the family that I’ve grown up in, where they are open to all of us following our dreams. Our dreams all happen to go hand in hand, and we’re able to work together.” 

That modeled her own relationship with Colombian star Camilo (who also goes by his first name), whom she married in February 2020. The pair collaborated on “Por Primera Vez,” “Machu Picchu” and “Índigo,” which peaked at No. 16 on Billboard’s Latin Airplay chart and No. 26 on the Billboard Global Excl. U.S. chart. She has also directed all of Camilo’s music videos, following in the footsteps of her mother, who would take Evaluna to work with her while she was directing on set. “I’d be her AD [assistant director], and it would be great because she’d make me do a bunch of things although I was really young,” she remembers. “I felt I was being productive, and that really encouraged me to say, ‘I think I can do this too.’ I don’t know if I’ll be as good as her, but I can try.” Even after directing for three years now, Evaluna confesses she’ll still call her mom to ask: “Do you think this idea for a music video is cool or do you think this is going to be lame?” 

Aside from touring and directing, Evaluna’s music career (she’s managed by Jorge Ferradas at FPM Entertainment, who also manages Camilo) is “very much a priority.” Her latest single, “Refugio,” a sunny ballad released last year with a video (directed by her mom) with over 4 million YouTube views, is a preview of what’s to come. “I’m not one to release a whole bunch of songs and go single after single,” she explains. “I like taking my time and nurturing a song before releasing it. I’m getting closer to the stripped-down, raw sound I want to have for myself.” 

A few weeks after Billboard spoke with Evaluna, the family of three will pack up again and kick off the second leg of the tour in Central America and Mexico. “Having to wake up early after you’ve had a long night, that’s intense,” she says of touring with a baby in tow. 

Still, that doesn’t compare to the comments she was seeing online after giving birth, the less-talked-about side effect of having millions of eyes on you. “That was the hardest part,” Evaluna says. “They were saying that childbirth had ‘done a number on me.’ The only reason I’m sharing this is because I wouldn’t wish that upon anyone. I regret feeling for a moment that those people might be right. I regret it because my body is incredible. It has been doing some crazy things since the moment I got pregnant.” She then adds confidently, “I feel like I’ve really grown as a woman, being a mother to this beautiful girl. I can say that I’m the woman I always dreamed of becoming.”

Tickets to Billboard‘s Latin Women In Music can be purchased here.