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“Danny Ocean – Corazón” from *Babylon Club* fuses Latin pop and urban beats, exploring emotional tension and longing. Ocean, born Daniel Alejandro Morales Reyes in Caracas, earned triple Platinum (Latin) for his 2019 album “54+1.” “Bebeshito – Carne,” a 2025 reggaeton track by Oniel Ernesto Columbie Campos, mixes reggaeton with Arabic elements, produced by Roberto Ferrante and El Bandolero. “Despues De Las 12” by El Chulo and El Poxo blends reggaeton and Latin flair, promoting the Reparto genre. El Chulo, from Havana, is known for hits like “Un Favor” and collaborations with Nicky Jam, J Balvin, and Cardi B. “Danny Ocean – Ojalá” (2025) is a Latin pop song about longing after a fleeting romance. “Grupo Marca Registrada – Esos Ojitos” combines norteño and Pacific regional styles with romantic themes, led by Fidel Castro on vocals and accordion. Formed in 2014, their hits include “Si Fuera Fácil” and “Solo Me Dejaste.” “Cásate Conmigo” by Max Carra and Marama merges Latin pop with cumbia, celebrating love and commitment. Max Carra is from Carlos Spegazzini, Argentina, while Marama contributes energetic, melodic arrangements. Here are the brand new Latin music videos that caught, these past days, our interest and liking. Beware (possibly) NSFW |
47 . Danny Ocean – Corazón
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Date Added : Aug 9,2025
“Danny Ocean – Corazón,” a gem from his album *Babylon Club*, presents a rich fusion of Latin pop and urban vibes, crafted with rhythmic beats and melodic hooks. The lyrics dance around themes of emotional tension and longing between lovers, capturing both magical connections and the inevitable misunderstandings. Ocean’s smooth vocals perfectly encapsulate the vulnerability of falling in love and the struggle to communicate such profound feelings. Hailing from Caracas, Venezuela, Danny Ocean, whose full name is Daniel Alejandro Morales Reyes, is adept at blending reggaeton with Latin pop, a style that saw his 2019 album “54+1” get Atlantic Records’ triple-platinum nod in the Latin category. Music video directed by : Willy Rodríguez – Song featured on the album : Babylon Club Me Rehúso (2017) |
46 . Bebeshito – Carne
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Date Added : Aug 9,2025
Reggaeton single “Bebeshito – Carne,” set to release in 2025, shakes things up with a lively blend of reggaeton rhythms and Arabic musical elements. Produced by Roberto Ferrante and El Bandolero, it doesn’t shy away from provocative, sexually charged lyrics. Born Oniel Ernesto Columbie Campos on May 30, 1997, in Havana, Oniel Bebeshito etches his signature through double entendre and bold imagery. He rises to fame in 2021 alongside tracks “No Me Pongas Pero” with Harryson and “Delaito” with Los King Boys, embedding himself in the Cuban reggaeton scene. Music video directed by : Nan Quémalo (2023) |
45 . El Chulo – Despues De Las 12 (w/ El Poxo)
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Date Added : Aug 9,2025
Despues De Las 12 takes reggaeton and intertwines it with Latin flair, courtesy of El Chulo and El Poxo. The scene is El Chulo, who goes by Abel Díaz Rodríguez during the day and calls Havana home, making Cuban urban culture heard beyond borders. He’s set on introducing the Reparto genre to the world, layering dynamic percussion with melodic choruses. Known for his candid stance against the Cuban regime, El Chulo‘s repertoire includes hits like “Un Favor” and “La Diabla.” His collaborations with Nicky Jam, J Balvin, and Cardi B add a global glow to his urban narrative. Dile Dile Dile (2022) |
44 . Danny Ocean – Ojalá
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Date Added : Aug 9,2025
“Danny Ocean – Ojalá,” a Latin pop tune from 2025, intertwines smooth, rhythmic production with lyrics brimming with longing and desire. The song narrates the tale of wanting a deeper bond after a fleeting romantic encounter. Ocean’s fascination with a lover’s eyes and hope for more than just a night of dancing shine through the lyrics. Originally from Caracas, Danny Ocean, born Daniel Alejandro Morales Reyes, made a mark with his 2019 album “54+1” on Atlantic Records, earning triple Platinum (Latin) status. Music video directed by : Willy Rodríguez – Song featured on the album : Babylon Club Me Rehúso (2017) |
43 . Grupo Marca Registrada – Esos Ojitos
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Date Added : Aug 9,2025
With “Grupo Marca Registrada – Esos Ojitos,” a window opens onto the serenades of Culiacán, Sinaloa, where norteño rhythms and Pacific regional styles converge. The song engages with its romantic themes of love and longing, carried by emotive vocals interwoven with accordion melodies that pull at the heartstrings. Guided by Fidel Castro, a name as notable as his singing and accordion playing, Grupo Marca Registrada marries nostalgia to a fresh twist. Founded in 2014, the group leaves its mark with earworms like “Si Fuera Fácil” and “Solo Me Dejaste,” putting a melodic stamp on modern tradition with their 2023 album “Don’t Stop the Magic.” Si Fuera Fácil (2022) |
42 . Max Carra & Marama – Cásate Conmigo
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Date Added : Aug 9,2025
“Cásate Conmigo,” a lively Latin pop concoction by Max Carra and Marama, takes a tango with romance and commitment. This track blends love-struck themes and rhythmic beats integral to modern Latin tunes, crafting a jubilant vibe. Max Carra, hailing from Carlos Spegazzini, Argentina, marries Latin pop with cumbia, offering a sound as distinctive as his roots. Marama, ever the spirited ensemble, injects their melodic gusto, amplifying the energetic pulse of this matrimonial anthem. Song featured on the album : Viajemos En El Tiempo #2 Uwaie (2023) |
41 . Kris R – Electrolibonbon
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“Kris R – Electrolibonbon” offers a pulse from Medellín’s spirited streets, where Kris R crafts his unique “Trap de Medallo.” Fusing trap with reggaeton, the track vibrates with urban beats and dynamic production. Celebration intertwines with introspection, reflecting the artist’s distinct sound palette. Kris R, known as “El Niño E’ Dinero,” hails from Medellín and leaves his mark with hits like “Trap Phone” and “Con Gomitas Las Pacas.” Music video directed by : ; Mi Burrito Sabanero (2023) |
40 . Xavi & Kapo – Bien Pedos
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“Xavi & Kapo – Bien Pedos” offers a compelling fusion of regional Mexican and reggaeton sounds. Xavi, with his roots in Puerto Rico and now thriving in the U.S., integrates the “tumbado romantico” style into his romantic corridos. His partner in this venture, Kapo from Colombia, injects the track with rhythmic reggaeton and Afrobeat elements. Together, they craft a dynamic soundscape, where emotive guitar riffs meet infectious beats, echoing Xavi‘s approach in tracks like “Bésame.” Always finding the balance between heartfelt and danceable, “Bien Pedos” is an understated mix, both playful and rhythmic. Poco A Poco (W/ Los Dareyes De La Sierra) (2022) |
39 . Grupo Frontera – Lalala
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
Step into the world of “Grupo Frontera – Lalala,” a regional Mexican melody where norteño and cumbia converge, crafted by Edgar Barrera in July 2025. This track spins a tale of yearning and heartbreak, where memories resurface in once-loved places. Since their 2022 genesis in McAllen, Texas, Grupo Frontera has packed a punch with norteño spiced with modern flair. Keep an ear out for their crowd-pleasers like “Bebe Dame” alongside Fuerza Regida and the Bad Bunny crossover “Un x100to.” No Se Va (2022) |
38 . Los Dos Carnales – El Maquilero
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“El Maquilero” emerges from the creative minds of Los Dos Carnales, hitting the airwaves in July 2025 under the Afinarte Music label. Alfonso crafts a tune that clings tenaciously to the norteño roots the band bears with pride. Traditional instruments echo the everyday grind of a maquilador, a nod to the labor-centric tales of northern Mexico. Poncho and Imanol Quezada, the sibling duo behind the band, made their mark with “Corridos Pa’ la Historia” in 2020, striking a chord with hits like “El Envidioso.” El Borracho (2021) |
37 . ROA, Clarent & Midnvght – Reinaa
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“ROA, Clarent & Midnvght – Reinaa” is a fusion track that taps into the contemporary urban soundscape, blending Latin rap and melodic hooks, perfect for the diverse musical backgrounds of ROA, Clarent, and Midnvght. ROA, born Gilberto Figueroa in 1996 in Naranjito, Puerto Rico, has been shaping Latin urban music with a sound that merges romantic trap, reggaeton, R&B, and soul. Since his active start in 2020, ROA‘s discography includes hits like 2022’s “Jetski-Remix” and “ETA – RMX” in 2024, along with albums such as Private Suite, Vol. 1 & Vol. 2. ROA continues to release music, including the single “Reinaa,” in early 2025, showcasing his ongoing creativity and influence. Uuu 2 (W/ Hades66, Luar La L) (2023) |
36 . Los Chavalitos – El Carrito
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“El Carrito” by Los Chavalitos cruises through life’s everyday pleasures, featuring their distinctive style within the regional Mexican music spectrum. This track, released in August 2025, takes listeners on a ride through norteño and conjunto traditions, woven with subtle humor and simple reflections. The group’s prowess is further echoed in classics like “Ya Volví de Corea,” a standout from the “Tejano Roots: San Antonio’s Conjuntos in the 1950s” compilation. Yo Ya Sabia Pa Donde Iba (2023) |
35 . Kidd Voodoo & Yandel – Muñecota
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“Muñecota,” a track from July 2025, sees Kidd Voodoo teaming up with Yandel to deliver an urban energy cocktail shaken with Latin trap and reggaetón influences. While Kidd Voodoo brings a fresh, urban spark from his indie roots with the band Resonancia Etérea, Yandel infuses the mix with his seasoned reggaetón flair. Kidd Voodoo, aka David Simón León Urbina from Maipú, Santiago, Chile, turned focus toward urban beats in 2020, debuting with EP “Pa los sátiros Vol.1” in 2022. Satirología (2023) |
34 . Rauw Alejandro – Buenos Términos
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“Buenos Términos” merges contemporary Latin pop and Afro-Caribbean rhythms, showcasing Rauw Alejandro‘s knack for innovative production coupled with emotive lyrics. The Puerto Rican artist, born in 1993 in San Juan, doesn’t just deliver songs; he crafts soundscapes that resonate with his audience. His prominence in the Latin music scene is marked by hits like “El Efecto” and “Fantasías,” which form part of his debut album “Afrodisíaco” released in 2020. Music video directed by : Martin Seipel & El Zorro Tranky Funky (2023) |
33 . Mariano Razo – Un Superhéroe Por Ti
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“Mariano Razo – Un Superhéroe Por Ti” finds Mariano sashaying into the music world, blending his influencer and athletic persona into his lyrics. The track hits the airwaves in August 2025, showcasing Mariano’s imagination as he journeys through cosmic and prehistoric landscapes for love. Ticking the boxes of adventure, he bolts through space, dives into seas, and mingles with dinosaurs with the singular aim of morphing into a superhero for his beloved. Previously entertaining audiences on “Exatlón México” and TikTok, Mariano crafts a new tune of devotion and creativity. |
32 . Efecto SR, Miguel Cornejo, Victor Valverde, Marcos Villalobos – Infiltrados
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“Infiltrados” unites Efecto SR, Miguel Cornejo, Victor Valverde, and Marcos Villalobos in a 2025 number that’s all about blending styles. With subtle Latin pop vibes, the track’s melodic instrumental and smooth vocal interplay make it an intriguing listen. The lyrics play with the theme of secrecy, as the title “Infiltrados” suggests, hinting at hidden intentions amid the music’s catchy flow. Efecto SR, the sibling duo Juan and Emilio Salazar, shrug off clichés by mixing traditional Mexican sounds with contemporary pop flair since their 2022 debut. El Burrito De Belén (2023) |
31 . Latin Mafia & Omar Apollo – Hecho Para Ti
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Date Added : Aug 6,2025
“Hecho Para Ti” sees Latin Mafia teaming up with Omar Apollo, merging nostalgic cumbia with modern indie vibes. Tyler Spry co-produces the track, harking back to cumbia’s golden era, crafting a retro sound akin to “time-jumping cumbia pulled from your tío’s VHS.” Lyrics ponder love and heartbreak, rich with emotional vulnerability. Raised in Mexico City by Milton, Emilio, and Mike de la Rosa, Latin Mafia blends reggaetón, R&B, trap, and house. Their 2024 debut, “Todos los días todo el día”, snags a Latin Grammy nod for Best New Artist. Flores (2022) |
30 . Corazón Serrano & Ken-Y – Una Como Tú
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Una Como Tú” throws the chicha cumbia playbook into a blender with electrocumbia swirls and the unmistakable highland pulse of huayno. Corazón Serrano’s sharp-edged norteña cumbia meets Ken-Y’s reggaetón-soaked vocals, all dressed up in keyboard flares that waste no time going full wedding-party mode. Both acts take turns in a lament that’s as dramatic as the genre allows, trading poetic disillusion with the precision of seasoned telenovela extras. Olvídame (2022) |
29 . LIT Killah & Neutro Shorty – Dresscode
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Dresscode” pushes LIT Killah and Neutro Shorty into a seamless back-and-forth where Argentine trap meets Venezuelan flair. The beat keeps things sharp and polished, folding into a slick urbano latino groove that doesn’t ask for attention but still manages to hold it. They trade verses with something resembling nonchalance, shifting between charisma and controlled braggadocio without breaking pace. No high-concept ambition here—just a well-aligned collaboration threaded through with precisely the kind of restraint that makes trap latino feel unbothered by expectations. Wake Me (2020) |
30 . Corazón Serrano & Ken-Y – Una Como Tú
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Una Como Tú” throws the chicha cumbia playbook into a blender with electrocumbia swirls and the unmistakable highland pulse of huayno. Corazón Serrano’s sharp-edged norteña cumbia meets Ken-Y’s reggaetón-soaked vocals, all dressed up in keyboard flares that waste no time going full wedding-party mode. Both acts take turns in a lament that’s as dramatic as the genre allows, trading poetic disillusion with the precision of seasoned telenovela extras. Olvídame (2022) |
29 . LIT Killah & Neutro Shorty – Dresscode
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Dresscode” pushes LIT Killah and Neutro Shorty into a seamless back-and-forth where Argentine trap meets Venezuelan flair. The beat keeps things sharp and polished, folding into a slick urbano latino groove that doesn’t ask for attention but still manages to hold it. They trade verses with something resembling nonchalance, shifting between charisma and controlled braggadocio without breaking pace. No high-concept ambition here—just a well-aligned collaboration threaded through with precisely the kind of restraint that makes trap latino feel unbothered by expectations. Wake Me (2020) |
28 . Dowel King – Tontin
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Tontin” juggles its way through a cluttered beat, derailing genre expectations with a few well-placed kicks and chattering percussion glitches. Dowel King tears into a looped vocal chop whose pitch-shifted scream falls somewhere between giddy and exasperated—no explanation offered, none really needed. The structure never settles; what starts off minimal and twitchy morphs abruptly into something fuller, then abandons it just as easily. There’s melody somewhere back there, but it’s mostly buried under rhythmic stammers and detuned disruptions, as if harmony’s not invited to this session. Music video directed by : Dir.Juanragarcia Busca Eso (2023) |
27 . Juan Duque – Ojalá (w/ Nanpa Básico)
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
Juan Duque teams up with Nanpa Básico on “Ojalá”, a wistful slice of pop urbano where regrets arrive in sleek melodies and half-sent promises. From a distance, it may sound like a love song dressed in its Sunday best, but it’s the kind of romance that checks Instagram at 2 a.m. and leaves drinks half-finished. Produced with precision, it walks a tightrope between radio gloss and the quiet kind of sorrow that doesn’t ask for sympathy—just stream it and pretend you’re over it. Juan Duque (2023) |
26 . Alex Zurdo & Jay Kalyl – Con Dio
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Con Dio” pulls Alex Zurdo and Jay Kalyl into the same room—figuratively and literally—as they trade verses on faith, purpose, and divine presence. No need for mystery here: Christian themes sit front row, tucked into beats that flirt with hip hop and pop without losing their Sunday best. It’s a track where the production holds the hand of the message without squeezing too hard, letting the lyrics do their own lifting. Both artists keep things tight, bouncing off each other with enough gusto to suggest they’ve done this before, and liked it. If you’re waiting for a twist, sorry—this one seems content walking the straight path, all the way to the altar. Guarda Tu CorazóN (2023) |
25 . HEREDERO – Cosita
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
Over a backdrop of Colombian popular music with a ranchera twist, “HEREDERO” weaves a narrative of inheritance laced with pride and maybe a touch too much swagger. Through confidently delivered verses, Cositafrom sorts through legacies—of name, blood, and land—with all the gravity of a notarized will and the theatricality of a telenovela finale. It’s less a humble tribute and more a lyrical audit of who gets what, and why they should be very thankful. Music video directed by : Edwin Jaimes Sabor A Derrota (2023) |
24 . Almighty – Tóxico
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Tóxico” operates somewhere between exorcism and confessional, as Almighty untangles his past addictions with a measured flow that doesn’t try to glamourize regret. Set to a Latin trap beat laced with reggaeton echoes, the track loops around relapses, late-night escapades, and a certain fondness for excess that still lingers like smoke on a jacket. The production stays minimal but brooding, leaving plenty of room for lines that sound more like whispered admissions than declarations. It’s not penitence, exactly—more like a shrug toward salvation that’s always one verse away but never quite arrives. Sarcastica (2025) |
23 . Emanero – La Traición
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
In “La Traición”, Emanero toys with heartbreak over a cuarteto base, slipping into cumbia as if switching stations mid-song. The betrayal in question isn’t melodramatic—it comes with a shrug of resignation, not a punchline. His delivery stays straight-faced, letting the rhythms handle the emotion while the lyrics keep their distance. What sounds festive moves with a limp, like a party that knows exactly why it’s drinking. Music video directed by : Ernesto Gonzalez (Whaire) Bandido (W/ Fmk, Estani, Rusherking) (2022) |
22 . Quimico Ultra Mega & Dreyx – Melo
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
Químico Ultra Mega and Dreyx team up on “Melo”, where dembow meets minimalist strategy with a looped beat stripped of frills, thumps, or anything resembling melodic ambition. Instead, a dry synth motif keeps circling like it forgot where it was going, while the bass sticks to a flat-footed pace that seems almost allergic to groove. The vocals, traded with a kind of blasé conviction, float above like they’ve got someplace better to be, which may just be the point. Music video directed by : ; 69 Rip Aa (2024) |
21 . Alex Ponce – Ciego, Pero No Idiota
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Ciego, Pero No Idiota” flips the script on heartbreak, as Alex Ponce throws out the rose-colored glasses without losing his grip on reality. He may have ignored warning signs, but don’t mistake that for foolishness—more like temporary poor judgment with a catchy guitar riff. The lyrics tread familiar ground—infidelity, denial, self-truth—wrapped in phrasing that’s more resigned than enraged. No vocal acrobatics here, just a smooth delivery that suits a song resigned to what it already saw coming. En El Pasado (2023) |
20 . Elías Medina – Mejor Volvamos
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
Trading high drama for cold clarity, “Mejor Volvamos” lines up nostalgia, regret, and a dash of pride like dominoes that never quite fall. Elías Medina leans into a norteño-bolero mix with grupera echoes and a banda backbone, mood-setting with the restraint of someone who knows better—but sings anyway. Latin country in spirit if not confession, it’s a conversation that never turns into a fight, mostly because both sides already lost. El Malo (2023) |
19 . Luis Alfonso – Que HP Despecho
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Que HP Despecho” finds Luis Alfonso channeling heartbreak with the precision of a scalpel and the volume of a live bullfight. Between ranchera-style flourishes and the tear-worn textures of vallenato and popular Colombian music, he slices through regret with a defiant smirk. It’s a breakup song all right, but the kind where the pain dresses up in boots and hits the cantina before the tears even dry. Song featured on the album : Descriterio La Ex (2023) |
18 . Fer Durán – Maldito Payaso
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Date Added : Jul 30,2025
“Maldito Payaso” piles on a trumpet-heavy bolero sway with just enough reverb to sound like it’s bleeding through velvet curtains at 3 a.m. Fer Durán sets the scene with a jaded narrator calling out the titular clown—not for his jokes, but for stealing the spotlight and maybe the lover too. Released in 2020 and clocking in under three minutes, it dips into retro torch-song drama without overstaying its welcome. |
14 . ALTAFULLA – Un Coleto Como Yo
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Released in 2025, “Un Coleto Como Yo” is a single from Altafulla, born Andrés David Altafulla Blanco on December 21, 1992, in Barranquilla, Colombia. The track threads through themes of identity and authenticity, led by the refrain “Siempre va a ver un coleto como yo,” almost as if no introduction is needed. Somewhere between reggaeton and Colombian pop, it nods toward cultural lineage with “No soy Diomedes pero me haces mis días,” slipping in a wink to vallenato legend Diomedes Díaz. Altafulla first appeared on the musical radar in 2013 with “Aguacero,” and his later forays into reality TV—”Protagonistas de Nuestra Tele” and “La Casa de los Famosos Colombia” in 2025—didn’t hurt his visibility. Music video directed by : ; |
13 . Natanael Cano & Anuel AA – Como Es (Remix)
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
“Como Es (Remix)” pairs Natanael Cano‘s corridos tumbados—a blend of Mexican corridos with trap and hip-hop—with Anuel AA’s Latin trap flow. Released in July 2025, the track doesn’t hold back, cruising through lyrics steeped in power plays, upscale habits, and bedroom brags. There’s no shortage of posturing or glossy surfaces here, only different shades of seduction over loops that lean more low-rider than rave. Amor Tumbado (2020) |
12 . Eladio Carrión & Omar Courtz – Primer Lugar
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
“Primer Lugar” brings together Eladio Carrión and Omar Courtz in a melodic trap track steeped in urbano latino textures. Released in July 2025, it rides on a sleek, bass-heavy production that anchors a narrative centered on a romantic dynamic where the woman commands the spotlight. The lyrics orbit themes of mutual desire, tactile closeness, and undistracted chemistry, all wrapped in a tone that flips between playful and direct. Behind the verses, both artists pull double duty as composers and lyricists, shaping the song’s emotional charge. Carrión, Kansas-born and Puerto Rican by heritage, has long moved within the Latin rap and reggaeton zones, linking with names like Bad Bunny and delivering albums like “Sauce Boyz” and “Monarca,” which brought him Latin Grammy nods. Music video directed by : ; – Song featured on the album : Sen2 Kbrn Vol. 2 Sauce Boy Freestyle 5 (2021) |
11 . Tutu – Muñequita
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
“Muñequita,” the July 2025 single by Puerto Rican singer Tutu, slides neatly into the Latin urban current without bothering to explain itself. It sticks close to the codes of trap latino, blinking at tradition while scrolling through something more digitized and aloof. Tutu, active in the urban and Latin scenes, doesn’t go out of his way to charm—but there’s a smirk under the Auto-Tune if you squint. El Mago 2 (2023) |
10 . C-Kan – Si Tuvieran El Valor
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Released in late July 2025, “Si Tuvieran El Valor” runs on Latin urban and rap fuel, co-signed by Mastered Trax and C-Mobztas. Mexican rapper C-Kan, born José Luis Maldonado Ramos in Guadalajara on July 26, 1987, sounds as if he’s had a few things bottled up and finally hit record. The lyrics lean into trials, backstabs, and the weary merit of proving oneself—standard fare unless delivered with his trademark directness. The track holds form as a narrative: losing, scrapping back, then sizing up those who’d fold under half the pressure. Since breaking through with “Voy Por El Sueño De Muchos” in 2012, C-Kan’s collaborations—yes, including Snoop Dogg—have rarely been accidental pairings. Round 7 (W/ Mc Davo) (2023) |
9 . MrStivenTc & Epidemic77 & JuanferLaMata – Ese Toto
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Released in July 2025, “Ese Toto” brings together MrStivenTc, Epidemic77, JuanferLaMata, and Dexta Small in a track that lives somewhere between afro house, latin house, and tribal house—not that it needs to pick sides. MrStivenTc, born April 19, 2000, in Santiago de Cali, Colombia, steps away from his usual vlogs and gaming streams to stand behind a mic, quite possibly without a gaming headset on. His million-subscriber army usually finds him in Medellin, Colombia, slicing through Twitch and Kick.com—this time, they’ll have to press pause on the gaming montage edits. As for Epidemic77, JuanferLaMata, and Dexta Small, they don’t stay in the background, though they do enjoy letting the beat do most of the talking. |
8 . Gera MX – 2.2.4 Hoy, Mañana Y Siempre
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Released under Sony Music Entertainment México in July 2025, “2.2.4 Hoy, Mañana y Siempre” finds Gera MX in introspective mode, stitching together personal reflections with his signature urban flair. The track circles around emotional struggle, loneliness, and the persistence to keep pushing—territory he handles without fanfare, just with bars. This single marks another chapter for Gerardo Daniel Torres Montante, the Nuevo León native who first made noise in 2016 with “Los Niños Grandes No Juegan” before casting a wider net with 2021’s “Botella Tras Botella” alongside Christian Nodal. Botella Tras Botella (W/ Christian Nodal) (2021) |
7 . Maisak – Otra Vida
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Released in March 2025, “Otra Vida” pairs Maisak’s reggaetón swing with the unlikely wail of an accordion, courtesy of Fénix The Producer behind the boards. Maisak, hailing from Santa Marta, Colombia, rewires memories of his father’s Vallenato sets on Rodadero beaches into something a bit more night-mode. The song circles around the ache of a breakup, resigned and raw, clinging to lines like “Voy a extrañarte, eso no lo dudes.” There’s no grand catharsis—just the quiet hope that maybe, in some alternate rerun, there’s a second shot at whatever this was. Se Me Olvida (W/ Feid) (2023) |
6 . Yahir Saldivar & Ian Cordova – No Me Importó
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Released in 2025, “No Me Importó” pairs Yahir Saldívar and Ian Córdova in a Mexican regional track that sidesteps regret as skillfully as its protagonist dodges bullets. The lyrics follow a “sicario” who shrugs off consequences, favoring hidden routes, armed routine, and the usual cycle of violence over self-reflection. The paternal thread runs through—fatherhood clouded by criminal routine, where lost innocence and shifting identity get brushed aside like yesterday’s headlines. From Monterrey, Saldívar—whose “Cielo Rojo” already made noise—previously stepped onto Chile’s Viña del Mar stage, waving more than just the Mexican flag. Song featured on the album : El Inicio Del Rey En Una Mancha (W/ Los Parna) (2024) |
5 . Hermanos Gutiérrez – Elegantly Wasted (w/ Leon Bridges)
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Conceived during a brief Nashville studio stop, “Elegantly Wasted” pairs Hermanos Gutiérrez’s layered guitar lines with Leon Bridges’ unmistakable voice. The track emerges as their first in English, following a seven-week tour that brought Bridges and the Zürich-based duo into closer orbit. Mid-session, Bridges hums a melody; Dan Auerbach, on cue, joins with a guitar and a few adjustments, rounding out what becomes the finished cut. Formed in 2015 by brothers Alejandro and Estevan Gutiérrez, the group maintains their signature sound here, only this time it speaks a different language. Music video directed by : Matt Muir Esperanza (2022) |
4 . Morad & J Abecia – Chula
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Released in July 2025 under the M.D.L.R label, “Chula” arrives with Morad and J Abecia dividing the verses like it’s a neighborhood debate set to music. The production is handled by Hamza El Hassnaoui, whose beat keeps things moving but never steals the scene. Sung in Spanish, the track plants itself in the Latin genre without needing to wave a flag about it. Morad, born in 1999 in Catalonia, Spain, first caught ears with “NO SON DE CALLE,” and kept the noise going with “NO TE IMAGINAS” and a Bizarrap detour in “Bzrp Music Sessions Vol. 47.” Song featured on the album : Reinsertado 2.0 Toca (2021) |
3 . Muñecazo & Nathaly Pirish – Aishman Yawá
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
“Aishman Yawá” ropes in Muñecazo and Nathaly Pirish for a Spanish-language number steeped in Pastaza’s Amazonian textures. Family extends into feature credits, with Nathaly Pirish’s mother María Shacay and relative Naikin Samarenda adding voice and presence. The sonic palette leans on “Música Amazónica,” woven with the distinct grain of local tradition. The Proyecto Causay group chimes in via the music video, flaring their national competition credentials with visual choreography tailored to the track’s pulse. Muñecazo signs on with the weight of a catalog nearing 30 albums and 34 songs, leaving no doubt he’s got some mileage behind the mic. Music video directed by : Ruwana Films, Cabes Producciones Ya Quiéreme (2023) |
2 . Jenny López – El Dolor Con El Licor
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Jenny López returns in July 2025 with “El Dolor Con El Licor,” a música popular ballad that puts heartbreak and hangovers on equal footing. This time, the Colombian singer leans into the emotional spiral of love gone wrong, where liquor fills in for closure and tears go better with strings and brass. Like in her earlier singles “Enséñame a Quedarme” and “Te Necesito,” she mixes traditional Latin sounds with a few modern touches, just enough to update the melancholy without curing it. Amor A Escondidas (2021) |
1 . Gera MX & King Zoo & Geassassin – 1 Millón
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Date Added : Jul 26,2025
Released in June 2025, “1 Millón” brings together Gera MX, Geassassin, and King Zoo on a track that makes space for all three in performance, composition, and lyrics. Gera MX—real name Gerardo Daniel Torres Montante—comes from Nuevo León, Mexico, and started charting his path in Mexican hip-hop with the 2016 album “Los Niños Grandes No Juegan.” His name reached broader ears in 2021 thanks to “Botella Tras Botella,” a collaboration with Christian Nodal that pried open the genre’s streaming doors. Music video directed by : Gama Tejeda – Song featured on the album : Las Que Escribí Y Nunca Saqué Botella Tras Botella (W/ Christian Nodal) (2021) |
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