“En 4” unites Kenia OS and Anitta in a bilingual pop cut laced with innuendo and shared control, while “Arruiname La Vida” sees Kenia team with Luck Ra, balancing Argentine swagger and Sinaloan edge. “Cosas Sencillas” blends Silvestre Dangond’s Vallenato with Carín León’s regional norteño instincts.

Elsewhere, Moncho Chavea and Camin deliver “Salud y Libertad” with stripped confidence. “Dicen Ser,” “Usted,” and “Veneka” thread regional identity into rap, while “Hay Que Creer” pairs Diferente Nivel and Grupo Recluta in a sober anthem of belief.

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Here are the brand new Latin music videos that caught, these past days, our interest and liking. Beware (possibly) NSFW

28 . Kenia OS, Anitta – En 4

Date Added : Apr 18,2025

“En 4” pairs Mexican singer-songwriter Kenia OS with Brazilian pop figure Anitta in their first official collaboration, released via Sony Music Mexico.

The track fuses pop elements from both artists’ cultural spheres, with lyrics alluding to bedroom schematics as deftly as to shifting power dynamics.

Kenia, who launched her career through YouTube in 2018, matches Anitta’s Grammy-nominated global profile with entrepreneurial flair and steady output.

Por Siempre (2018)

27 . Luck Ra, Kenia OS – Arruiname La Vida

Date Added : Apr 18,2025

“Arruiname La Vida” brings together Argentine artist Luck Ra and Mexican singer Kenia OS under Sony Music Entertainment US Latin LLC.

He pivots from the football pitch to recording booths with singles like “La Morocha” and “El campeón,” the Copa América 2021 anthem.

She transitions from YouTube notoriety in Mazatlán to a 2018 debut with “Por Siempre” and “Bonita,” opting now for sharper emotional textures.

Ya No Vuelvas (2022)

26 . Silvestre Dangond, Carín León – Cosas Sencillas

Date Added : Apr 18,2025

“Cosas Sencillas” brings together Colombia’s Silvestre Dangond and Mexico’s Carín León for a cross-genre interplay wrapped in regional flair.

Dangond, a Vallenato figurehead with Latin Grammy nods and credits like “Cásate Conmigo,” meshes his signature melodic style with León’s reworking of the Mexican regional sound.

Released under Sony Music US Latin, the single refrains from spectacle, opting for texture over noise.

Niégame Tres Veces [Live] (2014)

25 . Diferente Nivel – Hay Que Creer (w/ Grupo Recluta)

Date Added : Apr 18,2025

“Hay Que Creer” pairs Diferente Nivel‘s signature narrative grit with Grupo Recluta’s regional sensibilities for a track steeped in resilience and quiet defiance.

Structured around themes of adversity and belief as currency in uncertain worlds, the song lines up neatly with Diferente Nivel‘s earlier efforts like “El de la Kush” and “El Mundo Te Come.”

Sinaloa’s undercurrents seep through every verse, stitched with lived-in detail rather than borrowed mythology.

El De La Kush (2016)

24 . R Jota, Dinero En El Beat – Dicen Ser

Date Added : Apr 18,2025

“Dicen Ser” pairs R Jota’s clipped delivery with Dinero En El Beat’s production that threads urban Latin rhythms through a rap-centric framework.

Rooted in Argentina’s urban music scene, R Jota—previously heard on “ALLA” alongside El Noba and DJ Plaga—navigates themes of identity and bravado with pointed restraint.

Dinero En El Beat, a fixture across Latin America’s cumbia and urban circuits, supplies a beat that says more than it shares.

Coronaremos (2022)

23 . Moncho Chavea, Camin – Salud Y Libertad

Date Added : Apr 18,2025

“Salud y Libertad” pairs Moncho Chavea with Camin in a 2025 release under Virgin Music Spain, where Chavea multitasks as producer, mixer, masterer, arranger, and vocalist.

Camin lends his voice to a track that pivots on shared verses and rhythmic tension rather than flashy theatrics.

Rooted in reggaeton yet laced with Latin pop and dancehall, Chavea’s arrangement nods subtly to his gypsy heritage and spiritual grounding.

Rakata Remix (W/ Varios Artistas) (2020)

22 . Gabriel Drago – Usted

Date Added : Apr 18,2025

“Usted” traces Gabriel Drago’s streetwise alter ego navigating affection and misjudgment beneath Lima’s ever-watchful eyes.

Set to a steady hip hop rhythm tinged with Latin and jazz undertones, the lyrics thread familial criticism and personal backstory into a portrait both defiant and intimate.

Drago, once called Jethro, continues weaving his Peruvian background into a sound shaped as much by soul as by survival.

Dream (2018)

21 . Rawayana, Akapellah – Veneka

Date Added : Apr 18,2025

“Veneka” emerges from a 2024 collaboration between Rawayana and rapper Akapellah, catalyzed by a viral snippet that led to a slightly expedited release.

The song spins a lyrical homage to Venezuelan women, stitching together nods to regional nuances and public figures like Victoria Villarroel, whose cameo in the lyrics alludes to her diasporic allure.

Its production flirts with Raptor House—or “changa”—infusing early 2000s party nostalgia with the unmistakable voice of Waldemaro Martínez, synonymous with mobile discos and sweaty weekend soirees.

The single’s artwork mimics the look of pirated street-sold CDs, giving the whole package a distinctly bootleg charm grounded in Venezuelan urban culture.

Formed in Caracas in 2007, Rawayana—Alberto “Beto” Montenegro, Antonio “Tony” Casas, Andrés “Fofo” Story, and Alejandro “Abeja” Abeijón—layers reggae, funk, salsa, and psychedelic pop across its catalogue.

The group secures a 2024 Latin Grammy for Best Pop Song and a 2025 Grammy for Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album.

Binikini (W/ Danny Ocean) (2022)

20 . Alex Zurdo – Tu Salón

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“Tu Salón” sees Alex Zurdo swap streetwise bravado for a chalkboard and eraser, sketching his spiritual convictions across the walls of a metaphorical classroom.

Trading scars for scriptures, he frames divine instruction as the preferable curriculum—walking past the school of hard knocks in favor of grace-led tutorials.

True to his style since “Nada Es Mío,” he keeps one foot in rhythmic precision, the other firmly in theological reflection.

Guarda Tu CorazóN (2023)

19 . Nacho, Jay Kalyl, Funky – Sobre La Roca

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“Sobre La Roca” assembles Nacho, Jay Kalyl, and Funky around a shared affinity for the Christian Latin urban genre, forging a triad that blurs lines between scripture and streetwise flows.

Funky, a steady figure since the early 2000s, slips in his seasoned cadence shaped by decades in Puerto Rico’s faith-anchored hip-hop scene.

Jay Kalyl threads melodic hooks with devotional undercurrents, staying within his signature thematic bounds.

Nacho, post-“Mi Niña Bonita” and post-“UNO,” sidesteps commercial reggaeton bombast for something laced with reverence, yet unmistakably rhythmic.

Báilame [Remix] (W/ Yandel, Bad Bunny) (2018)

18 . Junior H & Gael Valenzuela – El Chore

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“El Chore” pairs Junior H with Gael Valenzuela, weaving contemporary corridos through a filter of lived bravado and regional tradition.

Valenzuela, recurring pen behind tracks like “En La Peda” and “Tres Botellas,” maintains his role as behind-the-scenes architect.

Produced by Jimmy Humilde and Ernesto Fernandez, the track leans into a stripped swagger that neither pleads nor postures, just states the case.

Y Lloro (2022)

17 . Banda Ms De Sergio Lizárraga & El Mimoso Luis Antonio López – Sé Sincera Corazón

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“Sé Sincera Corazón” pairs Banda MS de Sergio Lizárraga with El Mimoso Luis Antonio López in a ranchero-leaning banda track penned by Sergio Lizárraga and Omar Tarazón.

The lyrics stage a quiet standoff at love’s crossroads, plaintively requesting candor from the heart before the final word is spoken.

Both artists trace their origins to Sinaloa—MS since 2003, and El Mimoso from his tenure with Banda El Recodo before launching a solo career.

Mi Olvido (2018)

16 . Moa Rivera & Elvis Crespo & Jerry River – Coqueta

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“Coqueta” assembles Moa Rivera, his father Jerry Rivera, and Elvis Crespo in an intergenerational reimagining of a Colombian hit by Heredero, merging salsa and merengue with a hint of música típica.

Elvis Crespo takes the reins on production, reshuffling regional rhythms into a seamless Puerto Rican-Colombian hybrid.

Moa likens performing with his father and Crespo to “being with the Avengers, Hulk and Thor.”

He credits Jerry for years of guidance prioritizing discipline and a disruptive take on salsa.

Rubes (2023)

20 . Alex Zurdo – Tu Salón

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“Tu Salón” sees Alex Zurdo swap streetwise bravado for a chalkboard and eraser, sketching his spiritual convictions across the walls of a metaphorical classroom.

Trading scars for scriptures, he frames divine instruction as the preferable curriculum—walking past the school of hard knocks in favor of grace-led tutorials.

True to his style since “Nada Es Mío,” he keeps one foot in rhythmic precision, the other firmly in theological reflection.

Guarda Tu CorazóN (2023)

19 . Nacho, Jay Kalyl, Funky – Sobre La Roca

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“Sobre La Roca” assembles Nacho, Jay Kalyl, and Funky around a shared affinity for the Christian Latin urban genre, forging a triad that blurs lines between scripture and streetwise flows.

Funky, a steady figure since the early 2000s, slips in his seasoned cadence shaped by decades in Puerto Rico’s faith-anchored hip-hop scene.

Jay Kalyl threads melodic hooks with devotional undercurrents, staying within his signature thematic bounds.

Nacho, post-“Mi Niña Bonita” and post-“UNO,” sidesteps commercial reggaeton bombast for something laced with reverence, yet unmistakably rhythmic.

Báilame [Remix] (W/ Yandel, Bad Bunny) (2018)

18 . Junior H & Gael Valenzuela – El Chore

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“El Chore” pairs Junior H with Gael Valenzuela, weaving contemporary corridos through a filter of lived bravado and regional tradition.

Valenzuela, recurring pen behind tracks like “En La Peda” and “Tres Botellas,” maintains his role as behind-the-scenes architect.

Produced by Jimmy Humilde and Ernesto Fernandez, the track leans into a stripped swagger that neither pleads nor postures, just states the case.

Y Lloro (2022)

17 . Banda Ms De Sergio Lizárraga & El Mimoso Luis Antonio López – Sé Sincera Corazón

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“Sé Sincera Corazón” pairs Banda MS de Sergio Lizárraga with El Mimoso Luis Antonio López in a ranchero-leaning banda track penned by Sergio Lizárraga and Omar Tarazón.

The lyrics stage a quiet standoff at love’s crossroads, plaintively requesting candor from the heart before the final word is spoken.

Both artists trace their origins to Sinaloa—MS since 2003, and El Mimoso from his tenure with Banda El Recodo before launching a solo career.

Mi Olvido (2018)

16 . Moa Rivera & Elvis Crespo & Jerry River – Coqueta

Date Added : Apr 17,2025

“Coqueta” assembles Moa Rivera, his father Jerry Rivera, and Elvis Crespo in an intergenerational reimagining of a Colombian hit by Heredero, merging salsa and merengue with a hint of música típica.

Elvis Crespo takes the reins on production, reshuffling regional rhythms into a seamless Puerto Rican-Colombian hybrid.

Moa likens performing with his father and Crespo to “being with the Avengers, Hulk and Thor.”

He credits Jerry for years of guidance prioritizing discipline and a disruptive take on salsa.

Rubes (2023)

15 . El Biofa & Chawala – La Nota

Date Added : Apr 15,2025

Interweaving the textures of Colombian urban music, “La Nota” spotlights El Biofa and DJ Chawala in a collaboration where persistence is penned into every verse.

The song’s premise hinges on a motivational note, found at a low point, that nudges the narrator toward self-improvement over defeat.

With lines like “yo quería parar… pero yo buscando descubrí la palabra que decía ahí,” the track resists melodrama while gesturing at quiet resilience.

Chawala, a producer rooted in champeta and founder of the Organización Musical Rey de Rocha, steers the production into familiarly percussive terrain without overplaying nostalgia.

El Biofa, Cartagena-born and shaped by familial loss—his late brother being champeta icon El Sayayín—grounds the song in personal history without turning it into a lament.

No fireworks, no preaching—just family, discipline, and a beat anchoring the message: goals don’t move closer unless you do.

Mi Tristeza (2015)

14 . Servando & Florentino, Maelo Ruiz – No Te Vayas

Date Added : Apr 15,2025

“No Te Vayas” pairs Servando & Florentino’s 1990s Latin pop inflections with Maelo Ruiz’s signature romantic salsa, gliding between nostalgia and plea.

The Venezuelan duo, known for tracks like “De Sol a Sol,” brings a youthful melodic sensibility that counters Ruiz’s seasoned vocal warmth.

This 2025 collaboration leans into sentimentality without surrendering rhythm, equal parts croon and sway.

Si Yo Fuera Tu (2007)

13 . Dale Pututi – Tirita

Date Added : Apr 15,2025

“Tirita” extends Dale Pututi’s sonic blueprint, fusing Cuban urban beats with polished, radio-friendly hooks.

The title, translating to “Band-Aid” in Spanish, toys with metaphors of healing and emotional quick fixes.

Released in April 2025, the single aligns with Pututi’s transition from behind-the-scenes producer to frontman, a path he began navigating in late 2022.

The track is accompanied by an official video and is streaming widely.

El Cubanito Coronó (2023)

12 . Quimico Ultra Mega, La Perversa – No Es De Mentira

Date Added : Apr 15,2025

“No Es De Mentira” pairs Quimico Ultra Mega’s gritty vocal flair with La Perversa’s measured bite in a back-and-forth that deflates illusions of romance without resorting to melodrama.

Anchored in dembow and laced with trap Latino motifs, the track trades pleasantries for blunt confrontation, delivered over a beat that doesn’t wait for apologies.

Released in March 2025 under InnerCat Entertainment, it situates both artists right where they appear most at ease: unapologetically blunt.

69 Rip Aa (2024)

11 . Gonzalo Genek – Métele Bellako

Date Added : Apr 15,2025

Infused with reggaeton grit and trap precision, “Métele Bellako” skims across hard-hitting beats and slick wordplay.

Gonzalo Genek, the Peruvian rapper-producer who once crafted beats stateside before lacing verses across Latin America, returns to his familiar sonic terrain.

The single joins a catalog that includes “A Veces” and collaborations with Gera MX, further threading his rhythmic obsession with raw urban textures.

A Veces (2019)

10 . Trueno, Young Miko – En La City

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

“En La City” pairs Trueno’s Argentine swagger with Young Miko’s Puerto Rican cadence in an ode to nocturnal opulence and street-born ambition.

Their first joint track, it parades through hip-hop and reggaeton like a midnight convoy of self-assurance and designer sneakers.

Trueno moves from freestyle circuits to Billboard flirtations, while Miko trades football pitches and tattoo ink for trap beats and clever rhymes.

Karly B (2023)

9 . Rauw Alejandro – Carita Linda

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

“Carita Linda” layers Rauw Alejandro’s hallmark vocal stylings over Bomba Yubá, a 17th-century Afro-Caribbean rhythm born of enslaved African communities in Puerto Rico.

Traditional meets synthetic as the track folds in urban and futuristic textures without erasing its roots.

The video, shot in Puerto Rico, features vejigante masks, bomba and plena ensembles, and cameos from Alejandro’s real-life parents.

Music video directed by : Martin Seipel & El Zorro

Tranky Funky (2023)

8 . Leire Martínez – Mi Nombre

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

“Mi Nombre” marks Leire Martínez’s first foray as a solo artist after splitting from Spanish pop outfit La Oreja de Van Gogh.

Released in April 2025, the track plays like a scorched-earth diary entry, teasing out frustrations and shedding old skins with surgical clarity.

Lines like “Nunca fui tuya” and “Búscate a alguien que me sustituya” thread self-detachment with acidic closure.

Wearing Van Gogh’s “The Starry Night” on her tie, she signals she’s not erasing her past—just signing it off.

7 . La Perversa, Arlene MC – Que Pasa

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

In “Qué Pasa,” La Perversa and Arlene MC trade flirtatious lines over a reggaeton beat designed less for subtle seduction than overt invitation.

Released under Mapa Negro Music, the track traffics in rhythmic urgency and lyrical cheek, with snippets like “Dime qué pasa si yo te bailo pegadito” doubling as both tease and challenge.

Delivered with a wink, the track plays with proximity, pleasure, and the logistics of moving in.

Aficia De Un Chuky (W/ Nino Freestyle) (2020)

6 . L-Gante & XXL Irione & Fili Wey & El Melly – 4 Negros

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

In “4 Negros,” L-Gante, XXL Irione, Fili Wey, and El Melly converge under Dinero en el Beat’s production, each bringing their stylistic nuances to a track that fuses Cumbia 420 with urban rap textures.

The song addresses street dynamics, mutual loyalty, and survival, threading their narratives through a rhythmic structure at once regional and unfiltered.

Their delivery balances pride and grit, bypassing ornamentation for matter-of-fact intensity.

Music video directed by : Nefasto 420

Bzrp Music Sessions #38 (2020)

5 . Eladio Carrión, Big Sean – Branzino

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

“Branzino” pairs Eladio Carrión’s urbano fluency with Big Sean’s Detroit-rooted bars over a beat stitched together by The Alchemist, Hide Miyabi, and Sean Turk.

Carrión, Kansas-born and Puerto Rican-raised, brings his reggaeton-hardened cadence honed on albums like “Sauce Boyz.”

Big Sean slips in with lyrical precision, his Grammy-nominated catalog hovering in the backdrop without needing introduction.

Song featured on the album : Don Kbrn

Sauce Boy Freestyle 5 (2021)

4 . Kiry Curu – Una Paca

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

Dominican Republic-based Kiry Curu delivers “Una Paca,” a track released under Disetti Music in March 2025, where hip-hop frameworks merge with lean rap cadences.

The title nods to a stack of money, a not-so-subtle metaphor for the drive toward material ascent and the cost of getting there.

The lyrics spiral through street life rituals, ambition’s contradictions, and the weary glamour of resilience.

Fue Del Mismo Coro (2023)

3 . Liriko Wan – La Luna

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

In “La Luna,” Liriko Wan leans into heartache with the detached honesty of someone who’s made peace with solitude but still texts the moon nightly.

Released in April 2025 under Loudness Music Group, the track threads Mexican hip-hop through themes of grief, longing, and late-night philosophizing.

Lyrics balance resignation and quiet desperation: “Cada noche que yo pienso en ti me pongo a ver la luna.”

The moon, evidently, remains more reliable than most humans.

Elsewhere, existential dread gets a verse: “De qué me sirve esta vida si es prestada…”

Delivered in a tone that swings between confessional and accusatory, Liriko’s voice reads like a diary entry left under a streetlamp.

“La Luna” follows his previous releases “El Diablo En Persona” and “Muero por Ti II”—songs similarly invested in tracing emotional wreckage over somber beats.

Here, he trades rage for reflection, sounding less like a man seeking closure and more like one writing eulogies for feelings that overstayed.

Mucho Cholo En El Canton Rmx (W/ Danksa, Carlosluengo, Zaiko, Smoking, Beejay) (2024)

2 . Henry Méndez & Lennis Rodríguez – Loco Enamorao

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

“Loco Enamorao” pairs Dominican vocalist Henry Méndez with Spanish singer Lennis Rodríguez in a Pop Latino track that borrows freely from merengue and urban styles.

Produced by Chus Santana and Victor R-Swag, the single spins a tale of euphoric infatuation and reckless affection set to buoyant beats.

Lyrics like “Me tienes loco enamorao” and “Eres mi reina, mi amor eterno” toe the line between adoration and theatrical surrender.

Music video directed by : Alex Terrero & Estela Castro

El Tiburón [The Shark] (2012)

1 . El Kamel – Mi Vida

Date Added : Apr 12,2025

“Mi Vida” unfolds as El Kamel’s introspective take on Urbano Latino, expertly threading Reggaeton with understated Latin influences.

Released under Black Market Records in April 2025, it sketches a delicate balance between sentiment and survival, pondering life’s charms and bruises without veering into melodrama.

Cuban by origin and self-styled as “The King of Cuba,” El Kamel continues weaving personal growth with the politics of the heart.

Real (2022)


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(*) According to our own statistics, upadted on April 13, 2025