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Latin

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Fuerza Regida continues its good fortune across Billboard’s Latin charts as “Bebe Dame,” with Grupo Frontera, jumps 2-1 on the Regional Mexican Airplay chart (dated March 18). The song’s new coronation lands after it dominated Hot Latin Songs for two weeks.
“Bebe Dame” rises to the top of Regional Mexican Airplay thanks to a 15% increase in audience impressions, to 9.2 million, earned in the U.S. in the week ending March 9, according to Luminate. The collab was released Dec. 16 and belongs to Fuerza Regida’s Sigan Hablando album, which earned the five-member ensemble its highest peaking set on Top Latin Albums (No. 2, Jan. 28) and a two-week reign on Regional Mexican Albums.

“Bebe Dame” is the second collaborative effort by Regida and Frontera, following “911” which reached the top 25 on the multimetric Hot Latin Songs chart last December.

Back on Regional Mexican Airplay, as “Bebe Dame” leads the 29-year-old ranking, Regida secures its first champ. Previously, the San Bernardino, Calif-based group reached the top five through the No. 5-peaking “Sigan Chambeando” in August 2019.

Frontera, meanwhile, claims its second leader in less than two months. The group replaces itself at No. 1, sending “Que Vuelvas,” with Carin León, to No. 5 following its six-nonconsecutive-week run on top, which began on the Jan. 28-dated list.

Further, “Bebe Dame” holds at No. 2 on Hot Latin Songs for a seventh frame after two weeks atop, despite dips in both streams and digital sales. It also leaps 6-2 on the all-genre Latin Airplay tally, granting Regida its first top 10 there. Frontera picks up its third straight top 10.

Los Dos Carnales Score a Second Top 10 on Latin Airplay

Elsewhere on the Latin charts, Los Dos Carnales earn its second top 10 among six entries on Latin Airplay as “Se Me Soltó El Hocico” flies 14-6.

“Se Me Soltó” advances to the upper tier boosted by a 24% gain in audience impressions, with 7.6 million, earned during the March 3-7 tracking week.

The first time Alejandro Sanz toured in the U.S. was over 20 years ago. A lot has changed since then.
“I remember the first few times I went to the U.S. on tour, there were very few Latin companies,” the Spanish singer-songwriter tells Billboard. “There was probably a promoter in Miami, another in Los Angeles. But all of us together have been paving this road, we’ve created a world in the U.S. that is now a huge market. It’s now time to go back and celebrate what we’ve been able to accomplish in this country with Spanish music.”

Sanz is set to come back to the U.S. for the first time since the pandemic with his Sanz En Vivo Tour, produced by Loud And Live. The 11-date trek kicks off in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in September and has stops in cities such as Chicago, New York and Houston before wrapping up in Los Angeles in October. “I expect this comeback will be filled with a lot of love, magic, good energy. Let’s enjoy music,” adds Sanz, who recently wrapped up a 15-date stint in Mexico.

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To still be able to tour and do sold-out shows at this point of his decades-long career, is everything, says Sanz. “For an artist, everything is about being on a stage. Everything else is a bonus, even recording. To be able to be on stage is what one dreams when you dream of being a musician. You dream of sharing, to be able to fill spaces with emotions.”

In his shows, Sanz promises to perform the classics, such as “Corazón Partío,” “Amiga Mía” and “Mi Persona Favorita,” plus new music, including songs from his 2021 Latin Grammy-nominated album SANZ. Tickets are set go on sale March 17 at 10am local time via www.alejandrosanz.com.

Below, the complete list of dates for Sanz En Vivo:

Sept. 16 – San Juan – Coliseo de Puerto RicoSept. 21 – Orlando – Amway CenterSept. 23 – Miami – Miami-Dade ArenaSept. 27 – Chicago – Rosemont TheaterSept. 29 – Washington, D.C. – EagleBank ArenaSept. 30 – New York – The Theater at MSGOct. 5 – McAllen – Bert Ogden ArenaOct. 7 – Dallas – Texas Trust CU TheaterOct. 8 – Houston – Smart Financial CentreOct. 12 – El Paso – El Paso County ColiseumOct. 14 – Los Angeles –Microsoft Theater

Daddy Yankee gets to swing for the fences in his new role as ambassador for the 2023 World Baseball Classic (WBC).
As part of his ambassadorial duties, the reggaeton artist throws his superstar status behind an anthem for the current tournament, “Chispa,” which he co-produced with Play-N-Skilz.

According to a statement from organizers, “Chispa” will be featured across WBC and MLB social platforms, and with the Classic’s coverage, in-park activations and more.

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Also, Daddy Yankee is expected to attend several games played at loanDeport park in Miami throughout the tournament, which he launched by throwing out the first pitch last Sunday (March 12) before the Venezuela vs. Puerto Rico game.

Much has happened in the year since Yankee announced his retirement from music.

The Puerto Rican artist (born Raymond Ayala) ends his touring career on a high, with his La Ultima Vuelta trek raking-in $197.8 million and 1.9 million tickets sold over 83 shows in 2022, according to figures reported to Billboard Boxscore.

That’s by some distance the biggest tour of his career, and behind only Bad Bunny among Latin artists.

Yankee’s collaboration with Luis Fonsi, “Despacito,” last year extend its reign as the most-viewed music video on YouTube, by hitting the magical 8 billion streams milestone. And his final album, 2022’s Legendaddy, gave Yankee a career-high No. 8 peak on the Billboard 200, his second top 10 appearance on the all-genres chart.

The 46-year-old artist’s beloved Puerto Rico is one of 20 nations competing in the Classic, which reaches its climax March 21 in Miami. Sanctioned by the World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC), it’s the sport’s premier international competition — essentially, the world cup for baseball.

Grupo Firme reached a historic milestone by packing the iconic Foro Sol in Mexico City seven times, bringing together an audience of 455,000, according to figures from Mexican promoter Ocesa.

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The shows were part of Firme’s successful 2022-23 Enfiestados y Amanecidos Tour. Their last concert at the venue was Saturday (March 11), when 65,000 people shows up, according to organizers.

“So far, the Mexican regional group is the only one to pull out seven concerts at Foro Sol as part of the same tour,” Ocesa told Billboard Español.

Foro Sol, part of the legendary Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, headquarters of Formula 1 in Mexico, is a stadium that has hosted some of the most important musical events in the country, including concerts by legends such as U2, Coldplay, Guns N’ Roses and the late British rock star David Bowie, who in 1997 was chosen as the opening act of this venue with his Earthling World Tour.

Since its creation in 2013, Grupo Firme has established itself as one of the most cherished Mexican regional bands, not only due to their music but also to its style and charisma.

Their songs, which combine the tradition of the genre with elements of pop and urban music, have become huge hits in Mexico, the U.S. and beyond. Titles like “El Tóxico,” “Ya Supérame” and “Cada Quien,” to name a few, have appeared on the Billboard charts.

Among their multiple achievements, the band has sold shows in a matter of minutes.

Grupo Firme has also been credited with having gathered the largest audience for a free concert in Mexico City’s Zócalo last September: 280,000 people, according to the municipal authorities.

According to their representatives, these achievements “generate great expectations regarding a new U.S. tour in cities they have never visited before, so that all their fans can enjoy their greatest hits live.”

The nominations for the 2023 Latin American Music Awards were announced on Monday (March 13), with Bad Bunny leading the pack at 11 nominations, including artist of the year, song of the year and album of the year. 
The Puerto Rican global star is followed by Becky G and Daddy Yankee, each with nine nominations; and with eight nods each are Grupo Frontera, Karol G, Rauw Alejandro, Romeo Santos and Rosalía, to name a few. Additionally, Bizarrap, Blessd, Edén Muñoz, Grupo Frontera, Los Lara, Luis Figueroa, Luis R Conriquez, Quevedo, Santa Fe Klan and Yahritza y Su Esencia are nominated in the best new artist category. 

TelevisaUnivision also revealed that Carlos Vives and Pepe Aguilar will be recognized as 2023 Latin AMAs Legacy honorees.

Co-hosted by Galilea Montijo and Julián Gil, the eighth edition of the Latin AMAs will take place on Thursday, April 20, at the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas, and for the first time — since its debut on Oct. 8, 2015, on Telemundo — the ceremony will be broadcast live simultaneously on Univision, UNIMÁS and Galavisión (starting at 7 p.m. ET), after TelevisaUnivision acquired the rights from dick clark productions last September.

This year’s nominations are based on streaming, sales, radio airplay, tours and even social media interactions data provided by Billboard and Luminate during the eligibility period (Feb. 12, 2022, through Feb. 4, 2023). 

Fans can vote for their favorite artists on Univision.com/LatinAMAs through Sunday, March 26. 

See the complete list of nominees below:

Artist of the Year

Bad BunnyBecky GDaddy YankeeEslabón ArmadoFarrukoIvan CornejoKarol GRauw AlejandroRomeo SantosRosalía

New Artist of the Year

Bizarrap Blessd Edén Muñoz Grupo Frontera Los Lara Luis Figueroa Luis R Conriquez Quevedo Santa Fe Klan Yahritza y Su Esencia

Song of the Year

“Bebe dame” – Fueza Regida & Grupo Frontera“Despechá” – Rosalía“Dos oruguitas” – Sebastián Yatra“Está dañada” – Ivan Cornejo“La bachata” – Manuel Turizo“MAMIII” – Becky G & Karol G“Me porto bonito” – Bad Bunny & Chencho Corleone“Quevedo: BZRP Music Sessions, Vol. 52” – Bizarrap & Quevedo“Sus huellas” – Romeo Santos“Te felicito” – Shakira & Rauw Alejandro

Album of the Year

Ahora Me Da Pena EP – Buena Vista Social ClubDañado – Ivan CornejoEsquemas – Becky GFórmula, Vol. 3 – Romeo SantosJose – J BalvinLa 167 – FarrukoLegendaddy – Daddy YankeeMotomami – RosalíaNostalgia – Eslabón ArmadoUn Verano Sin Ti – Bad Bunny

Collaboration of the Year

“Bebe dame” – Fueza Regida & Grupo Frontera“El incomprendido” – Farruko, Víctor Cárdenas & DJ Adoni“MAMIII” – Becky G & Karol G“Mayor que usted” – Natti Natasha, Daddy Yankee & Wisin y Yandel“Me porto bonito” – Bad Bunny & Chencho Corleone“Medallo” – Blessd, Justin Quiles & Lenny Tavárez“Que vuelvas” – Carin León & Grupo Frontera“Quevedo: BZRP Music Sessions, Vol. 52” – Bizarrap & Quevedo“Te espero” – Prince Royce & Maria Becerra“Te felicito” – Shakira & Rauw Alejandro

Collaboration Crossover of the Year

“Arhbo (Music from the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Official Soundtrack)” – Ozuna, Gims,Redone & FIFA Sound“Borracho” – Sech & DJ Khaled“La fama” – Rosalía & The Weeknd“Sigue” – J Balvin & Ed Sheeran“Sin fin” – Romeo Santos & Justin Timberlake

Best Crossover Artist

DJ KhaledDJ SnakeEd SheeranFatman ScoopGimsJustin TimberlakeLil JonMegan Thee StallionMr. VegasThe Weeknd

Streaming Artist of the Year

Bad BunnyChencho CorleoneGrupo FronteraIvan CornejoKarol G

Tour of the Year

Enfiestados y Amanecidos Tour – Grupo FirmeLa Última Vuelta World Tour – Daddy YankeePapi Juancho World Tour – Maluma$trip Love Tour – Karol GWorld’s Hottest Tour – Bad Bunny

Best Duo or Group – Pop

Jesse & JoyLos Enanitos VerdesManáMau y RickyReik

Best Artist – Pop

AnittaBecky GCamiloEnrique IglesiasKali UchisLuis FonsiRicky MartinRosalíaSebastián YatraShakira

Best Album – Pop

@dannocean – Danny OceanDe Adentro Pa Afuera – CamiloDharma – Sebastián YatraEsquemas – Becky GMotomami – Rosalía

Best Song – Pop

“Bailé con mi ex” – Becky G“Junio” – Maluma“Provenza” – Karol G“Tacones rojos” – Sebastián Yatra“Te amo y punto” – Chayanne

Best Artist – Urban

Anuel AABad BunnyDaddy YankeeFarrukoJ BalvinJhaycoKarol GNatti NatashaOzunaRauw Alejandro

Best Album – Urban

Jose – J BalvinLa 167 – FarrukoLegendaddy – Daddy YankeeSaturno – Rauw AlejandroUn Verano Sin Ti – Bad Bunny

Best Song – Urban

“Desesperados” – Rauw Alejandro & Chencho Corleone“Envolver” – Anitta“Remix” – Daddy Yankee“Sensual bebé” – Jhayco“Tití me preguntó” – Bad Bunny

Best Collaboration – Pop/Urban

“Buenos días” – Wisin, Camilo & Los Legendarios“El incomprendido” – Farruko, Víctor Cárdenas & DJ Adoni“Hot” – Daddy Yankee & Pitbull“MAMIII” – Becky G & Karol G“Mayor que usted” – Natti Natasha, Daddy Yankee & Wisin y Yandel“Me porto bonito” – Bad Bunny & Chencho Corleone“Medallo” – Blessd, Justin Quiles & Lenny Tavárez“Punto 40” – Rauw Alejandro & Baby Rasta“Quevedo: BZRP Music Sessions, Vol. 52” – Bizarrap & Quevedo“Te felicito” – Shakira & Rauw Alejandro

Best Artist – Regional Mexican

Ángela AguilarCarin LeónChiquisChristian NodalEdén MuñozGerardo OrtizIvan CornejoJunior HLuis R ConriquezPepe Aguilar

Best Duo or Group – Regional Mexican

Banda Los RecoditosBanda MS de Sergio LizárragaCalibre 50Eslabón ArmadoFuerza RegidaGrupo FirmeGrupo FronteraIntocableLos Ángeles AzulesYahritza y Su Esencia

Best Album – Regional Mexican

Dañado – Ivan CornejoDel Barrio Hasta Aquí, Vol. 2 – Fuerza RegidaMi Vida En Un Cigarro 2 – Junior HNostalgia – Eslabón ArmadoObsessed Deluxe – Yahritza y Su Esencia

Best Song – Regional Mexican

“Chale” – Edén Muñoz“La boda del huitlacoche (Live)” – Carin León“No se va (En vivo)” – Grupo Frontera“Que te vaya bien” – Julión Álvarez y su Norteño Banda“Si me duele que duela” – Intocable

Best Collaboration – Regional Mexican

“Billete grande (En vivo)” – Fuerza Regida & Edgardo Nuñez“Brindo” – Mario Bautista & Banda El Recodo“Calidad” – Grupo Firme & Luis Mexia“Con un botecito a pecho” – Adriel Favela & Carin León“Hay que hacer dinero” – Banda MS de Sergio Lizárraga & Edén Muñoz“Jugaste y sufrí” – Eslabón Armado & DannyLux“Que vuelvas” – Carin León & Grupo Frontera“Se acabó (En vivo)” – Lenin Ramírez, Fuerza Regida & Banda Renovación“Si ya hiciste el mal” – Luis R Conriquez & Jessi Uribe“Ya acabó” – Marca MP & Becky G

Best Artist – Tropical

Carlos VivesMarc AnthonyPrince RoyceRomeo SantosVíctor Manuelle

Best Album – Tropical

Ahora Me Da Pena EP – Buena Vista Social ClubCumbiana II – Carlos VivesFórmula, Vol. 3 – Romeo SantosPa’lla Voy – Marc AnthonyThe Ultimate Bachata Collection – Héctor Acosta “El Torito”

Best Song – Tropical

“Despechá” – Rosalía“Después de la playa” – Bad Bunny“La bachata” – Manuel Turizo“Pegao” – Camilo“Sus huellas” – Romeo Santos

Best Collaboration – Tropical

“Baloncito viejo” – Carolos Vives & Camilo“El pañuelo” – Romeo Santos & Rosalía“Monotonía” – Shakira & Ozuna“Soy yo” – Don Omar, Wisin & Gente de Zona“Te espero” – Prince Royce & Maria Becerra

After teasing a collaboration for many months now, Rosalía and Rauw Alejandro officially announced Monday (March 13) a three-song project titled RR. Out March 24, the EP is comprised of three tracks: “Beso,” “Vampiros” and “Promesa.” It marks the first time that the couple recorded songs together.

The announcement on social media doesn’t give much away. The couple simply posted on both their accounts the artwork for it, which is two intertwined black Rs painted over a red canvas. They also shared the track list and wrote “24/marzo.”

In November, the Spanish star hinted at a potential collab with Alejandro during an interview with Billboard. “We’ve been in the studio together, as you know,” she teased without revealing much. “We’ll see, we’ll see.” Back in May, Alejandro also talked about collaborating with Rosalía during his panel at Billboard‘s MusicCon. “For sure we have a few stuff in the studio already,” he confirmed. “It’s a surprise. Those songs are [under] extra security. We’re planning to do the release, I’m not going to say when, but soon. We’re doing it for the love of the fans and she’s my girl and I did those songs with more love. No. 1 for sure.”

He also gushed about her producing skills in the studio. “She knows more about music than me. I’m just a guy from PR who parties and feels the vibe of songs. She’s an expert. That helps us in the studio, she adds her knowledge and I just put my craziness and feelings.”

RR will follow Rosalía’s Grammy-winning Motomami and Alejandro’s Saturno, which peaked at No. 2 on the Top Latin Albums chart.

When Bad Bunny picked up his best música urbana album award at the Grammys in February, he dedicated his win to “Puerto Rico, the cradle and the capital of reggaetón worldwide.” The superstar wasn’t grandstanding. The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is tiny. According to the most recent U.S. Census, there are a mere 3.2 million people on an island that measures 111 miles by 39 miles, roughly one-third the size of neighboring Haiti and one-fifth the size of the Dominican Republic. When it comes to music, however, Puerto Rico is a global giant — and not solely because of Bad Bunny’s record-breaking achievements over the past three years.

“Puerto Rico has been one of the main exporters of music for decades now,” says Paco López, founder and president of concert promoter No Limit Entertainment. “We’re very small in terms of territory, but very big in talent.”

Puerto Rico’s outsize influence can be found throughout Latin music history in the works of Héctor Lavoe, Willie Colón, Ricky Martín, Elvis Crespo, Marc Anthony and Jennifer López, as well as the current wave of urban music. Although reggaetón originated in Panama, it became globally popular thanks to Puerto Rican acts such as Tego Calderón, Daddy Yankee, Wisin y Yandel and Don Omar, and has reached new heights thanks to newcomers like Bad Bunny and Rauw Alejandro.

Bad Bunny performs during his concert at Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot on July 28, 2022 in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Gladys Vega/GI

That impact on the music industry is not limited to artists. Puerto Rico is home base for a growing number of recording studios, independent labels and concert venues that are supported by the growing number of music schools, educational initiatives and government incentives that keep the industry on the island evolving.

Between November 2021 and October 2022, the Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot alone grossed more than $40 million, according to Billboard Boxscore. And according to ASM Global regional GM Jorge Pérez, who oversees the fabled venue, the island’s live-entertainment industry created 30,000 jobs and generated $2 billion annually over the past two years. In that time, Puerto Rico also began hosting major televised shows, including Premios Tu Música Urbano (Telemundo), Premios Juventud (Univision) and Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve, that were broadcast from the territory. (Billboard parent company Penske Media Corp. partially acquired dick clark productions in January.)

Billboard spoke with 14 Puerto Rican industry leaders about the present and the future of the world’s most musical island. -LEILA COBO

Exporting Tradition

Rimas Entertainment head label manager Raymond Acosta says the Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot is a local treasure that hosts at least one show a week. The venue (known locally as “El Choli”) has become the island’s most iconic venue, with elite acts including Rimas artists Bad Bunny and Arcángel performing sold-out runs there. The venue is “a synonym for prestige for local acts who work day to day to give the Puerto Rican audience a groundbreaking show,” says the executive, who works under Bad Bunny manager Noah Assad. Acosta also points to the island’s ever-evolving use of technology as a factor in its growing global impact, stating, “We have been improving our skills around the music-creating process and learned how to translate our culture and traditions into music.”

Aerial view of Coliseo José Miguel Agrelot in San Juan, Puerto Rico at night.

Courtesy of ASM Global

‘Hotbed Of Artistic Creativity’

LaMusica vp of content development Bianca Alarcon, who says the island’s global influence is undeniable, describes Puerto Rico as a “hotbed of artistic creativity. … If there’s one thing Puerto Rico knows how to do best, it’s to create and evolve a genre of music and make it universally successful. It happened back in the ’50s and ’60s with the Cuban mambo, the boogaloo, the cha-cha-cha and Latin jazz, which Puerto Rican artists then morphed into what became known as salsa. Ditto with reggaetón. The Panamanians invented the sound, and the Puerto Ricans tweaked it and ignited it at a global level.”

What’s Next for Puerto Rico?: “Female artists are also getting some serious traction, which makes me super enthusiastic,” says Alarcon. “Artists like Young Miko, Villano Antillano, Catalina, Cory, paopao and RaiNao are killing it and creating some nifty collaborations in the process. ¡Gracias al canto de la isla del encanto!”

It’s Not Just The Artists

According to Duars Entertainment founder/CEO Eric Duars, the star power emanating from Puerto Rico would not have happened without the executives who guide artists to success, such as managers Raphy Pina and Noah Assad, who launched the careers of chart-topping acts Daddy Yankee and Bad Bunny, respectively. “The global industry must know that the talent in Puerto Rico is not limited to the artists,” says Duars, who knows the territory well. He manages Puerto Rican star Rauw Alejandro, whose Saturno peaked at No. 2 on Billboard’s Top Latin Albums chart in November. Duars adds, “We have a range of behind-the-scenes talents that have been just as relevant when it comes to developing new artists and launching them worldwide.”

Ties To The Mainland

The fact that Puerto Rico is a U.S. territory means it’s a “friendly” destination that shares the same currency and passport requirements as the 50 states, says José “Pepe” Dueño, president of concert promoter José Dueño Entertainment Group. Located just over two hours from Miami by plane, “Puerto Rico has been the vacation/concert destination for many international acts, such as The Rolling Stones, Madonna, Lady Gaga, Elton John, Billy Joel, Sting, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Maroon 5 and AC/DC,” Dueño says. He adds that “with the social media revolution, fans all over Puerto Rico are connected with a wider variety of global talent. Puerto Rico is a friendly destination for young artists as well as for those megastars.”

Artists For The History Books

Puerto Rico’s vibrant music scene is growing faster than ever thanks to digital advances and streaming platforms, according to Nanette Lamboy, CEO of marketing agency Artist Solutions. “We have top Puerto Rican superstars proudly representing the island all over the world,” she says, as well as writing their names in the pages of popular music and political history. In 2019, several musicians, including Ricky Martín, Bad Bunny and Residente, spearheaded anti-government protests after politically damning chats between Gov. Ricardo Rosselló and his staff leaked, resulting in Rosselló’s resignation.

Decades Of Puerto Rican Excellence

“When you talk about music, you need to talk about Puerto Rico,” says No Limit Entertainment’s López. He explains that the path for the latest generation of stars was paved by Menudo in the 1980s and by salsa stars and merengue artists like Elvis Crespo and Olga Tañón in the 1990s. “By the end of the 1990s, Ricky Martín and his ‘Livin’ la Vida Loca’ and ‘The Cup of Life’ made it to the World Cup and also got the audience on its feet at the 1999 Grammy Awards,” López says. As a result, the popularity of Puerto Rican artists and music has spread throughout Latin America and Europe, with a big boost from Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee’s “Despacito” in 2017. And “today, we boast the No. 1 artist in the world, Bad Bunny, who leads both streaming and touring artists.”

What’s Next for Puerto Rico?: “I heard from an indie impresario who wants to create traveling music studios in trucks and take them to housing projects and poorer neighborhoods to give young people with few resources the opportunity to display their talent,” says López. “If he’s able to pull this off, young people with scarce resources would be able to experience being in a music studio and recording their own music.”

Daddy Yankee performs during his La Ultima Vuelta LEGENDADDY Farewell Tour at FTX Arena on December 22, 2022 in Miami, Florida.

Alexander Tamargo/GI

Investing In New Talent

“We have demonstrated [the] fact that we are a very important place to develop talent,” says Andres Martinez, who manages Yandel and co-founded Jak Entertainment, of his native Puerto Rico. He praises the region’s Act 20 Decree of 2012 as a factor for helping boost the industry as a whole. The decree offers tax incentives for Puerto Rican companies to export their services, resulting in an estimated $210 million as of 2019 in added fiscal revenue, according to the Puerto Rican government. Many in the industry — including performers, producers, promoters and other executives — “have developed a financial organization chart around the law” to help fund projects and invest in talent, says Martinez.

Still The Reggaetón Kingmaker

According to Molusco, a TV, radio and YouTube host, Puerto Ricans aren’t concerned that the reggaetón popularized by Don Omar and Daddy Yankee is being effectively re-created in other countries. After all, the genre’s artists still have to “get their due” on the island and play iconic venues like Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot. “The genre evolved in Puerto Rico, but it was so big, and Puerto Rican artists so inspired artists from other countries that today, they do it everywhere and very successfully,” he says. But “once you make it in Puerto Rico, it’s like a seal of approval.”

What’s Next for Puerto Rico?: “There are thousands of opportunities in Puerto Rico at any given time,” Molusco says. “There are producers like Gaby Music and Chris Jedi who have built their recording and video studios for artists from Puerto Rico and outside artists who come to record here. We have tons of producers and composers on the island. We’re a hotbed of talent in every sense of the word.”

Just The Beginning

Puerto Rico “still has a lot to show,” according to La Buena Fortuna Global CEO Nelson “Polo” Montalvo. Thanks to the variety of music produced on the island, the amount of “per capita” talent across the music industry and its astonishing filming locations, Puerto Rico “could very well be a music-creation and distribution hub, sort of a one-stop shop,” he suggests. Key to this development, he says, is the next generation of emerging music executives and entrepreneurs. “There is a unique group of industry leaders coming out of this small Caribbean island who are changing the landscape of the music business industry,” Montalvo says. “New, creative ways of doing business are being developed from here.”

What’s Next for Puerto Rico?: “As an artist, I would say [rapper and Billboard Latin Artist on the Rise] Villano Antillano is the most promising rising talent right now out on the island,” Montalvo says. “She has broken and redefined, or just plainly thrown all rules out the window, thus changing the music industry landscape and opening doors for many new, creatively different, out-of-the-box artists. This is a new world of possibilities.”

Villano Antillano is photographed at the LA3C portrait studio held at Los Angeles State Historic Park on December 11, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.

Michael Buckner for Penske Media

80 Years Of Understanding

Nevarez Communications owner Mayna Nevarez says the global success of the music of Puerto Rico began over 80 years ago with Rafael Hernández’s 1937 triumph “Lamento Borincano” and World War II classic “Mi Viejo San Juan” by Noel Estrada. She attributes the island’s cultural success to Puerto Ricans’ understanding of the Latino market and the “incredible influence” from the English-speaking market. In recent years, Nevarez has seen independent labels reemerge and more Gen Z and millennial women lead important projects globally in the industry. Financial incentives that the island offers are also attracting more film and TV crews, she says, and opening doors for the local talent, as well as the recent transmission of live events from Puerto Rico, including the first Spanish countdown for Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve last year.

Island Of Gold

Carlos Ortiz Rivera (known professionally as Chris Jedi), co-founder/producer of record label La Familia, is passionate about supporting the talent emerging from Puerto Rico, especially female artists. “It has been a long time since we’ve had a female superstar from Puerto Rico. We’re looking for that,” he says. And despite the global success of Bad Bunny and other Puerto Rican artists over the last few years, Jedi contends that the local music business remains underappreciated on the world stage. “Puerto Rico is the key piece. We are the influence and the guide to follow,” he says. “It’s an island where gold comes out all the time.”

‘Large And Significant Impact’

Following Bad Bunny’s historic successes in 2022, ASM Global regional GM Jorge L. Perez says Puerto Rico is “producing a slew of promising newcomers projected to have worldwide reach in the next 12 to 24 months,” including Mora, Eladio Carrión and Young Miko. The Coliseo is a growing worldwide presence with 60% non-Puerto Rican performers and roughly 100,000 fans from outside the island gracing the venue in 2022, according to Perez. With the addition of the recently opened entertainment complex Distrito T-Mobile managed by ASM Global, “our aim is to use our venues in Puerto Rico to increase hotel occupancy through world-class live events” to increase the average length of stay which is currently just under three days, Perez says. “Every additional day will have an economic impact of $750 million for our island.”

Young Miko performs during the Amazon Music LAT!N, Neon16 And Buena Vibra Host El Juego All-Star Basketball Game In Puerto Rico With Artists From El Género on July 19, 2022 in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

John Parra/GI

Demand Keeps Growing

Puerto Rico’s cultural impact on a global scale is undeniable, and the growing demand for its artists and regional genres like reggaetón and Latin trap continues to boom, says Omar “Omi” Rivera, founder and talent manager at Omi Management (Arcángel, Myke Towers). The industry infrastructure (in a region that has more music studios than schools) widely supports its local talent and vibrant music scene, “making it a hub for music production and an incubator for emerging new artists,” he adds. In turn, this has drawn the attention of international awards shows like Premios Juventud and Premios Tu Música Urbano. The exponential growth of music from the island in recent years has led to “the rise of new artists from [Puerto Rico] and other Spanish-speaking countries, creating opportunities for the local music industry to expand and reach new audiences [while] attracting more investment [in] and attention to the island’s local scene.”

Not An Overnight Success

With a career trajectory that spans over 20 years, José “Pompi” Vallejo, co-founder of global live-entertainment, marketing and media company Mr. and Mrs. Entertainment, says the Puerto Rican music industry has worked nonstop for the global recognition it has today. But now, there are more “high-caliber professionals” in entertainment thanks to new university courses and the aid provided by the island’s Department of Economic Development to creative industries and entrepreneurs. “As a professor at one of the universities that offer these courses,” he says, “I have been able to see firsthand that the best is yet to come, not only in the music creation but also in the technical part that every artist needs on their team and that’s so important in the success of a project.”

This story originally appeared in the March 11, 2023, issue of Billboard.

Fresh off his first headlining “U.S. Trip” and “Ferxxo Nitro Jam” in Latin America, Feid unveils his 2023 “Ferxxo Nitro Jam Underground” tour exclusively on Billboard today (March 13).
Produced by Live Nation (which also helmed the artist’s 2022 U.S. tour), Ferxxo (pronounced Fercho) is set for a 29-city tour that kicks off April 20 at the WAMU Theater in Seattle and visits key cities such as Los Angeles, Las Vegas, New York, and Miami, before wrapping on June 17 at the Hard Rock Live in Orlando. 

For the first time in his 13-year career, the Colombian artist and Billboard cover star — behind hits such as “Normal” and “Feliz Cumpleaños, Ferxxo” — will visit Canada, where he will perform in Toronto and Montreal. In the midst of the trek, Feid is also set to headline the Sueños Music Festival in Chicago — also a first in his career. 

Tickets for “Ferxxo Nitro Jam Underground” go on sale at 10 a.m. local time on March 16 via LiveNation.com. Presale will begin at 10 a.m. local time on Tuesday, March 14.

April 20 — Seattle, WA @ WAMU TheaterApril 21 — Portland, OR @ Arlene Schnitzer Concert HallApril 23 — San Francisco, CA @ The MasonicApril 25 — San Jose, CA @ San Jose CivicApril 27 — Los Angeles, CA @ YouTube TheaterMay 03 — San Diego, CA @ Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air TheatreMay 04 — Sacramento, CA @ Hard Rock Live SacramentoMay 06 — Las Vegas, NV @ Chelsea Theatre at The CosmopolitanMay 07 — Phoenix, AZ @ Arizona Financial TheatreMay 10 — El Paso, TX @ El Paso County ColiseumMay 13 — Houston, TX @ Smart Financial CentreMay 14 — Hildago, TX @ Payne ArenaMay 17 — Dallas, TX @ The Pavillion at Toyota Music FactoryMay 20 — Oklahoma City, OK @ The CriterionMay 21 — Austin, TX @ TBC Bass Concert HallMay 24 — Indianapolis, IN @ Murat Theatre at Old National CentreMay 26 — Toronto, ON @ Toronto HistoryMay 27 — Chicago, IL @ Sueños Festival Grant ParkMay 28 — Montreal, QC @ Festival Fuego FuegoMay 31 — Boston, MA @ MGM Music Hall at FenwayJune 02 — Bridgeport, CT @ Hartford Healthcare AmphitheaterJune 03 — Washington, DC @ The Theater at MGM National HarborJune 04 — Philadelphia, PA @ The MetJune 07 — New York, NY @ Hulu TheatreJune 09 — Nashville, TN @ Ryman AuditoriumJune 10 — Atlanta, GA @ Coca Cola RoxyJune 14 — Charlotte, NC @ Belk TheaterJune 16 — Miami, FL @ Miami-Dade ArenaJune 17 — Orlando, FL @ Hard Rock Live

Adele caught Shakira‘s live collab with Bizarrap on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon and had some thoughts about it — which she shared with her own audience in Vegas this weekend.

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Shakira brought her latest global hit, her Bizarrap-produced, post-breakup diss track “Music Sessions Vol. 53,” to Fallon’s late-night show Friday night (March 10). The Colombian star delivered a fired-up live take of the personal track, closely surrounded by fans.

On Saturday night, Adele interacted with her own fans at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, one of whom happened to name Shakira as one of her favorite artists when Adele asked.

“Oh, I saw her performance last night on Jimmy Fallon … Oh, her ex-husband’s in trouble!” Adele said with a cackle. (Slight correction: Shakira and her ex partner Gerard Piqué were together for 11 years and have two children together, but they were not married.)

In her interview with Fallon on Friday, Shakira said that she knew the song — which throws jabs at Piqué and his new love interest, and has broken 14 Guinness World Records — would be a hit.

“I started to feel it in my body, you know,” Shak said. “I usually have this visceral sort of physical reaction to music.”

Hear Adele chatting about Shakira, and watch the performance of “Music Sessions Vol. 53,” below.

From career milestones and new music releases to major announcements and more, Billboard editors highlight the latest news buzz in Latin music every week. Here’s what happened in the Latin music world this week.

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LALI makes history

Argentine singer-songwriter LALI made history on March 4 with a sold-out concert at the Velez Sarsfield Stadium in Buenos Aires in front of more than 45,000 people. She becomes the first singer to sell out a show at that soccer stadium. The show was part of her Disciplina Tour. “It’s impossible to express what I feel after this sold-out show,” she wrote on social media. “Thanks to all who vibed with me. I am so proud of my dream team that is always by my side and made this happen. I’m also proud of myself for working hard to give you the best of me. A dream, that was once just a dream, came true.”

Motomamis Unite

Women took the streets across the globe on March 8 to rally for reproductive rights, a key topic in the U.S. after the Roe v. Wade U.S. abortion ruling was overturned last year and, in Latin America, where women also demanded accountability and more action for the unsolved killings of women and girls. Armed with protest signs, Rosalía’s empowering Motomami concept was a clear inspiration for those who had something to say. The Spanish star shared a handful of signs that read “Una Motomami Cuida a Otra Motomami (One Motomami Takes Care of Another Motomami),” “Yo Soy Muy Mía Yo Me Transformo. (I Am My Own. I Transform)” and “Ya No Soy Ni Voy a Ser Tu Bizcochito (I Am Not Nor Will I Be Your Bizcochito).”

All about girl power

In honor of International Women’s Day, Billboard compiled 21 powerful collabs between Latin women artists. The list includes unapologetic bangers, such as iLe and Ivy Queen’s latest track “Algo Bonito” and Ptazeta and Villano Antillano’s “Mujerón,” as well as ultimate breakup songs, such as Becky G and Karol G’s “MAMIII,” and of course Karol’s Shakira-assisted “TQG.” There’s also a couple of joints that are all about reflection and finding your self-worth after a toxic relationship, such as Kany García and Mon Laferte’s “Se Portaba Mal” and India and Goyo’s “Nubes Negras.” 

Check out the full list here.

Karol G is No. 1

Karol G scored her first No. 1 on Billboard’s Latin Songwriters chart (dated March 11), becoming just the second woman to rule the ranking. The only other woman to have hit No. 1 on Latin Songwriters is regional Mexican up-and-comer Yahritza Martinez, who tallied four weeks on top in April 2022 thanks to Yahritza y Su Esencia’s breakthrough single, “Soy El Unico.”

The Colombian star leads for the first time thanks to a whopping 16 songwriting credits on the latest Hot Latin Songs chart, all via songs on her new LP Mañana Será Bonito.

Anitta to make international actoral debut

The Brazilian superstar and Élite Netflix revealed on social media that she will be joining the Élite cast in its upcoming seventh season. “A girl from Rio you may already know… is about to make an entrance at Las Encinas. @Anitta is joining the #Élite7 cast,” read the post, referring to the Spanish series’ fictional elite high school. 

The caption is accompanied by photos of the artist in her new role showing a pensive yet potent look in her eyes and wearing a cropped grey sweater, red bra, and braids.