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The service is designed with a user interface that allows users to explore songs and music videos on YouTube based on genres, playlists, and recommendations. In April 2023, the service expanded its offerings to include support for podcasts. [2] YouTube Music also features a premium tier that provides several benefits to subscribers.
"Baila, Baila, Baila" (Spanish: "Dance, Dance, Dance") is a song by Puerto Rican singer Ozuna, released as the lead single on January 5, 2019, from his third studio album ...
Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny was named Top Latin Artist of the Year in the United States by Billboard for the fifth time in a row. [1]The following is a list of events and new Spanish and Portuguese-language music that happened in 2023 in the Latin music industry, namely music released in Ibero-America.
Latino 3 was released on October 2, 2007. Unlike the previous two NOW Latino albums, this volume features eighteen tracks rather than twenty and adds songs from the salsa and bachata musical genres.
Urbano music (Spanish: música urbana) or Latin urban is a transnational umbrella category including many different genres and styles. As an umbrella term it includes a wide and diverse set of genres and styles such as dancehall, dembow, urban champeta, funk carioca, Latin hip hop and reggaeton.
MTV Unplugged: Comfort y Música Para Volar (Spanish for Comfort and music to fly) is a part-live, part-studio album recorded by Argentine rock band Soda Stereo. The first seven tracks were recorded live at MTV Studios in Miami, Florida, for the show MTV Unplugged. The remaining four tracks were Sueño Stereo outtakes recorded in studio.
Now Esto Es Musica! Latino (Translated: Now This Is Latin Music!) is a music compilation album that was released on March 21, 2006 as part of the U.S. Now That's What I Call Music! series. This is first of the series to focus on Latin music, especially Latin pop and Reggaeton.
Like the previous two decades, Latin pop was mainly dominated by baladas.Unlike the Latin balladeers of the 1970s and 1980s however, Latin crooners in the 1990s such as Luis Miguel, Cristian Castro, Ricky Martin, Enrique Iglesias, and Alejandro Fernández, were much younger (being in their 20s) and appealed to a more youthful audience. [3]