The category should benefit this year from experimentalism, as artists leaned deeper into futuristic production and fusions ...
New York Mets infielder José Iglesias will release a remix ... some fans were surprised that the Puerto Rican superstar Bad ...
In the new song, the Grammy winner (whose real name is Benito Antonio ... Related: Kendall Jenner and Bad Bunny Share Some PDA in Gucci’s New Campaign The line appears to refer to an incident from ...
a twice-weekly guide to new and old songs. On the seventh anniversary of Hurricane Maria, which left lasting damage to Puerto Rico, Bad Bunny has released the mournful, resentful, adamant “Una ...
Bad Bunny will never forget the devastating tragedy ... but the Puerto Rican global sensation is revisiting the pain with his surprise song "Una Velita" (A Little Candle). In "Una "Velita ...
The billboards highlight long-held frustrations over the island’s two-party political system — one that is threatening to ...
It is his first solo song since last year’s Nadie ... to the palm tree emblem of the governing New Progressive Party. Earlier this week, Bad Bunny picked up a heap of Latin Grammys nominations.
Some of the lyrics reference a palm tree, which is also the emblem for the New Progressive Party on the island. The tempest crescendos and subsides, and Bad Bunny ends the song with a helium-high ...
The four-part docuseries explores the origins and rise of reggaeton, featuring artists like Bad Bunny, Daddy Yankee, Karol G and more.
As noted by Pitchfork, Bad Bunny’s lyrical references to palm trees may be a nod toward Puerto Rico’s New Progressive Party ... Little Secret.” The song’s title is self-explanatory.
To the delight of his fans Bad Bunny releases her first new single in months, "Una Velita." The song is a more serious tone for the singer who shares a deliberate message about his native Puerto ...