Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Latin Grammys 2025: When Latin Music Stops Being“Foreign”


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) For one night in Las Vegas, the Latin Grammys made something very clear: Spanish-language music is no longer a side show. It is one of the main stages of global pop.

On the surface, it was a glamorous awards ceremony. Bad Bunny, from Puerto Rico, and the Argentine duo Ca7riel & Paco Amoroso each took home five trophies.

Karol G won Song of the Year with a sunny merengue,“Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido.” Spanish veteran Alejandro Sanz surprised many by picking up Record of the Year for“Palmeras en el jardín.”

The real story sits underneath the gold statues. Bad Bunny 's winning album,“Debí Tirar Más Fotos,” is full of local sounds, Puerto Rican slang and references to the neighborhoods where he grew up.

Yet it dominates playlists from Miami to Madrid. His short speech thanked his parents, his brothers and the kids of Latin America, telling them to remember where they come from and to keep moving forward. It was more about roots and responsibility than slogans or big causes.


Latin artists win with audiences
Ca7riel & Paco Amoroso show another side of this shift. Two friends from Buenos Aires, with messy live shows and strange, funny videos, suddenly stand on the same stage as global superstars.

Their success says a lot about what happens when the gatekeepers lose power and the audience decides, song by song, who deserves attention. Karol G's hit comes from an older Caribbean rhythm, merengue, dressed for the streaming age.

Millions first met the song through dance challenges on TikTok, not on radio. Alejandro Sanz's victory reminds everyone that careful songwriting and emotional storytelling still matter in a business obsessed with quick hits.

For expats and foreign investors, this is more than entertainment news. Money, soft power and attention are following these artists. Latin America is not only a supplier of raw materials and football talent; it is shaping what the world dances to, sings in the car and posts online.

In a time of noisy cultural debates, the Latin Grammys quietly reward something more grounded: artists who work hard, speak to their own people first and still manage to win over the rest of the world.

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The Rio Times

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