Category Archives: Music News

Why Everybody’s Betting Big on Rosalía, the Flamenco Star No One Saw Coming

Why Everybody’s Betting Big on Rosalía, the Flamenco Star No One Saw Coming

With her ambitious fusion of flamenco tradition and urban swagger, the Spanish star is proving that a singular vision can have universal appeal.

When Rosalía was 16 years old, she lost her voice. She had been singing too much without proper technique, and she needed a vocal cord operation. “For a whole year, I was in rehabilitation, just listening to music,” she says. “I learned how to really listen.”

The experience was formative for an artist who has become an international superstar thanks in part to her attention to detail, from the intricate sounds of her genre-bending productions to every shot of her avant-garde videos. To this day, Rosalía always carries her “little pad” or her phone, writing down “everything I’m going to do, my ideas, the next step,” she explains. “The point is to connect with what made me go into this in the first place.”

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Ruven Afanador
Rosalía photographed on Sept. 3, 2019 at The 1896 in ­Brooklyn.

We’re chatting in early September over coffee and scrambled eggs at a suite in the trendy hotel EAST, Miami, where Rosalía speaks — mostly in Spanish but with a smattering of English — in a voice that speeds up when she’s excited but rarely rises above a murmur. Today, makeup-free and with her dark curly hair flowing loose over her shoulders, she looks much younger than her actual age, 27. Only her long nails, black and laced with glitter, give away the diva within.

In the year and a half since she independently released her single “Malamente,” earning immense critical acclaim for her contemporary, urban-music twist on flamenco, the Spain-born Rosalía has turned every preconception about her country’s iconic musical tradition on its head. She’s a trained dancer who traded heels and long-tailed dresses for platform sneakers, midriff-baring tops and sweats; a traditional cantaora who collaborates with rappers and reggaetoneros; a thrilling live performer who mixes hip-hop and flamenco moves with military precision in front of psychedelic visuals. “Rosalía possesses the very rare combination of a flawless artistic vision and remarkable live performances, and she keeps pushing every musical boundary,” says Ron Perry, chairman/CEO of Columbia Records, which signed Rosalía in the United States in 2018. “She’s a once-in-a-generation talent.”

Columbia, owned by Sony, doesn’t disclose the terms of its deals with artists, but sources say the record company has invested in Rosalía as much as it would in any mainstream superstar — a sum that industry sources say typically amounts to five to ten times as much as major record labels tend to invest in the acts they sign exclusively to their Latin labels or divisions.

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Ruven Afanador
Gucci dress, Rinaldy Yunardi headpiece, Area necklace, Aida Bergsen, Lillian Shalom and Bijules rings.

She’s already rubbing shoulders with the biggest names in the industry. Since her breakout record, El Mal Querer, debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Latin Pop Albums chart last fall, she has performed at Coachella and Lollapalooza, hit the studio with Billie Eilish and Pharrell Williams, graced President Barack Obama’s annual summer playlist and won two Latin Grammys. In August, Rosalía became only the third female Latin artist to perform at the MTV Video Music Awards (VMAs), after Shakira and Jennifer Lopez.

“There’s no one I can remember who has come out this fast — in any language,” says her agent, Samantha Kirby Yoh, WME partner and head of East Coast music. “I don’t think anyone has the attention she has gotten in terms of credibility in so many different genres and mediums.”

Even as recently as three years ago, it would have been hard to fathom Rosalía’s career trajectory. With very few exceptions, Latin artists have garnered mainstream U.S. attention only after achieving great success in the Spanish-speaking world. Typically, major U.S. labels enter joint-venture deals with their Latin counterparts to work acts who are releasing albums or singles in English. Rosalía, however, joined Columbia barely six months after signing with Sony Music Spain, and she still sings predominantly in Spanish — not only a sign of increasingly permeable genre and language barriers, but also of her star power. “She’s bigger than a Spanish artist. That’s what everyone is drawn to about her,” says Columbia executive vp/GM Jenifer Mallory.

El General’s ‘Rica y Apretadita’ vs. Pitbull’s ‘No Lo Trates’: A Comparison

El General’s ‘Rica y Apretadita’ vs. Pitbull’s ‘No Lo Trates’: A Comparison

Courtesy Photo
Daddy Yankee, Natti Natasha and Pitbull, “No Lo Trates”

Like “Rica y Apretadita,” “No Lo Trates” (Don’t try it) is a song about two men trying to conquer the same girl. The girl, on the other hand, makes it very clear that she’s an independent woman who knows her self-worth and is not easy to please.

“No Lo Trates” jumped 8-1 on Latin Airplay chart-dated Sept. 14. This week, the song also topped the Latin Pop Airplay and Latin Rhythm Airplay charts, becoming the fifth song to lead all three charts this year.

Maná and Pablo Alborán

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Maná’s ‘Rayando El Sol’: Original Song vs. New Pablo Alborán Collaboration

In celebration of two successful tracks, Billboard compares the original and new versions.

Title: “Rica y Apretadita”

Artist: El General feat. Anayca

Release Year: 1994

Song: In the early 1990s, “Rica y Apretadita” not only put Panamanian artist El General on international blast, but it also put in the forefront the infectious Caribbean rhythms of Latin reggae and plena. The song is in collaboration with Anayca. “Rica y Apretadita” never entered the Billboard charts; however, it continues to be a party favorite even 25 years after its release.

Video: Off the bat, the official “Rica y Apretadita” music video is NSFW. With that said, the clip shows El General having a work meeting while a beautiful lady interferes. Throughout the video, El General’s mischievous side comes out to play as he’s checking out other girls. In another clip, he’s laying down in his uniform as he’s being seduced by two women at the same time.

Title: “No Lo Trates”

Artist: Pitbull, Daddy Yankee & Natti Natasha

Release Year: 2019

Song: Paying tribute to a true Latin classic, Pitbull recruited Daddy Yankee and Natti Natasha to drop a revamped version of “Rica y Apretadita” in 2019. The fiery collaboration, called “No Lo Trates,” has different lyrics but the same flirtatious essence in the chorus. The melody fuses reggaeton with Caribbean flow, bringing to life a new party favorite. On social media, Pitbull dubbed the collab as a “triple threat.”

Video: The video for “No Lo Trates,” directed by Andrew Sandler, shows the three artists having a great time in a vintage-inspired club with many beautiful dancers and a live band. Unlike the original video from the ‘90s, this one is suitable for work! “The hottest music video with the hottest (artists) is already out,” Natti expressed on Instagram when the video dropped May 6, 2019. At the time of publishing, the clip had more than 148 million views.

FIFA 20 Soundtrack Features J Balvin, Major Lazer, Anderson .Paak, Disclosure, Alison Wonderland & More: Listen

FIFA 20 Soundtrack Features J Balvin, Major Lazer, Anderson .Paak, Disclosure, Alison Wonderland & More: Listen

“Qué Calor,” the new song from J Balvin and Major Lazer, is the lead track for the EA Sports FIFA game’s new Volta Football mode, influenced by street football (soccer).

More than 110 tracks from artists representing over 20 countries will be heard on the two soundtracks of FIFA 20’s traditional and Volta modes when the game is released on Sept. 27.

Major Lazer featuring J Balvin and El Alfa, "Que Calor"

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Major Lazer Recruit J Balvin, El Alfa For Cumbia-Inspired ‘Que Calor’: Watch the Video

EA has teased the tracks for anxious fans with two Spotify playlists that include “Qué Calor,” and other tracks by artists including Anderson .PaakDon Diablo, Alison WonderlandDisclosure and Suzi Wu. The entire playlists are to be added to Spotify today (Sept. 13), according to an announcement from EA Sports.

From left to right Josep Maria Bartomeu, president of FC Barcelona, Afo Verde, Chairma & CEO, Sony Music Latin Iberia, Josep Maria Barbat, president of Sony Music Entertainment Iberia, and Oscar Grau, CEO of FC Barcelona.

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FC Barcelona and Sony Music Partner For ‘Entertainment Experiences’ Combining Music and Soccer: Exclusive

“Originally, EA Sports FIFA soundtracks reflected world culture. Then they began to influence culture,” Steve Schnur, president of music, Electronic Arts, said via the announcement. “Today, the EA Sports FIFA soundtracks have become culture. For the first time in franchise history, we’ve curated two separate soundtracks for the game…The roster of artists not only captures the global spirit of the game from the stadiums to the streets, but elevates it like never before.”