Categories
New Music

Bad Bunny and Jhay Cortez’s “Dakiti” Breaks Records

Bad Bunny (@badbunnypr) and Jhay Cortez’s (@jhaycortez) Daktiti debuts at number 9 on this week’s Billboard’s Top 100. This placement earns Bad Bunny his third career top 10 hit–previous ones were I Like It (2018) with Cardi B and J Balvin and MIA (2018) with Drake–and Jhay Cortez’s first hit. MIA and Dakiti are the only all-Spanish-language songs in history to debut in the top 10… both are Bad Bunny’s. Moreover, Dakiti is the only song in history to simultaneously debut at number 1 on the Hot Latin Songs and debut top 10 on the Hot 100.

Dakiti is also currently number one on Spotify‘s Global Top 50 and on Apple Music‘s Top 100: USA.

The track seems to be El Conejo Malo’s first single to what will be his next, and perhaps final, studio album. It was officially anounced on October 26th, when Bad Bunny posted a snippet of the beat–produced by himself, Jhay, and Tainy–on his Instagram. It is not yet confirmed why Bad Bunny and Cortez don’t appear on the song’s credits as producers, but Jhay confirmed that they were behind the beat-making process on an Instagram story he posted. The rumors of a new collab between the two began in early October as footage of the two shooting the music video started circling the web.

“We’ve collaborated on remixes, [but] we had never come up with a song from scratch, [from] the both of us, I don’t know. We’re making music to last a long time.”–Bad Bunny, in Spanish

They both collaborated on Jhay Cortez’s No Me Conoce (Remix) (2019) along with Balvin and on COMO SE SIENTE (REMIX) (2020), which was featured Bad Bunny’s surprise album, Las Que No Iban A Salir.

Dakiti: Music Video

The music video premiered on October 29th, 2020 on El Conejo’s YouTube channel. So far, it has obtained 70.5M views and 2.2M likes on the platform. The video displays footage of Bad Bunny and Jhay recording in Bad Bunny’s portable studio on a beach in Malibu, CA.

Sebastian Van Hemert | IG @sebastianvanhemert | LinkedIn | Linktree
Categories
FM News

#FMSpotlight: NEON16’s Fernanda Arcay

Fernanda Arcay (@fefiarcay) is the head of marketing at NEON16 (@neon16), an up-and-coming independent record label currently taking over the Latin music industry. She is from Venezuela and has worked alongside the biggest artists and producers for many years.

We talked to Fernanda to know a little more about her career as head of marketing at NEON16 and we also asked he some questions about the label and current projects.

Q&A

[Here is a summarized version of the interview I conducted on Sep 15, 2020]

Q: Do you think that growing up in Venezuela has shaped the way in which you relate to coworkers and artists?

A: Yes, Venezuela gave me my Latinhood. I’m a Latina because my whole life I lived there, and even though I moved to the States a few years ago, I’ve never lost my culture, I’ve never lost my roots. I continue–every day–to practice everything I was taught, as a Latin. I speak Spanish every day, as well. It’s my first language. It’s so interesting that because I work in Latin music, I’ve been able to keep my roots, and like I said, what makes me a Latin.

Q: I saw that in college you interned at a public relations agency, how important do you think this was for you to advance in your career?

A: This was the most important thing I did in my college years. I did this internship twice, and when I graduated, that’s where I started working officially, and this is what made me a professional today. Everything I learned, I learned from working in this agency. I met a lot of people. I met a lot of artists. I gained a lot of experience, in advance, in award shows. It was definitely the highlight of what made me. And then, I would say it was the jumping step towards making now the head of marketing at NEON.

Having experiences during college is the most important thing you can do because you get to apply everything you’ve learned but in the actual work field.

Q: I saw an interview you did for a YouTube channel, you talked a lot about the narrative behind a release…

A: That’s very important. When you’re launching an artist, or working with your current artist, even if he or she is well-established, you always gotta have a story to tell. You always got to have these key messages and key images that you want your artist to portray so that when people look at them, they can automatically connect them to what you’ve been implementing in your strategy and in your campaigns. Trying to find that narrative for an artist is challenging, but once you have your narrative very clear, you take it from there and you work so that that narrative keeps making sense until it’s time to change it to a new narrative.

Q: Is this narrative supposed to be congruent across all forms of music media (e.g. cover art, music videos, posts)?

A: In everything. It all has to make sense between all outlets. Your cover has to make sense with your narrative, but also with the artist branding you’ve been doing, as well with the music videos,  and the music that you are releasing–the actual sound, the lyrics. Narratives tackle every single part of the artist, both creatively and music-wise.

Q: Building off that, do you think this takes away from the artist’s creative side, or do both parties work at finding a mid-point between what they want to do?

A: We always try to find a mid-point because you’re trying to keep the artist’s effort, as well, and their creative vision, and what actually motivates them. That’s why you always have to get through to your artist, connect with your artist, hear them out, know what they like, what they don’t like, and then, try to find a narrative that makes sense to both of you in the business side, but also in the personal side because it is essentially their life. They are the ones who are actually communicating the message through their socials or through their music.

Q: What’s it like to work with celebrities? Do you think you have to adapt who you are to relate to them or is it important to always be true to yourself?

A: It’s always important, no matter who you’re meeting, to be true to yourself. That way, you can keep your feet on the ground. I think it’s very important that you never change or adapt because of someone because that someone will notice that. You’re gonna reflect it. You reflect it in your energy, you reflect it in your attitude. At the end of the day, artists are normal people, and they like normal people, as well. So if you’re trying to act like something you’re not, you’re gonna show it off.

Working with these artists was such a great experience. I met so many people. And it’s not only the artists that you meet, you meet the artist’s team, you meet everyone around them, and by doing so, you’re essentially expanding your network, which is, at the end of the day, what matters the most because you don’t know who’s gonna help you tomorrow, you know?

Q: What role do you think that social media plays in music today?

A: Social media, today, is one of the most important tools. Social media has helped all the artists, especially during this pandemic, because everything went digital. A lot of the initiatives, a lot of the activities that were being made, were being made through social media or through their YouTube channels, and that’s what today has taught us: everything is going to turn more to the digital side, especially with this pandemic, and even after. The music industry has been shifted a lot.

Q: What role do you think TikTok plays in all of this?

A: TikTok is one of the most important tools, as well. In the Latin side, TikTok became important because people started replicating and using your sounds and your music in little dances or challenges. That shaped, when you are doing a song, how you choose what part goes to TikTok. Sometimes, the chorus is not the part that will be delivered to TikTok just because it’s not the most TikTok-friendly. When we’re choosing what we deliver to TikTok, we’re just saying “what makes the most sense?”, “what could go viral?”, and “what can people relate to?”.

We did it with Agua–J Balvin and Tainy’s record that we released under NEON and is going to be part of the new SpongeBob Movie. We saw how TikTok basically made the song go viral in the digital side. In the first weekend, we had a million TikToks, which is crazy. It became one of the top 5 challenges on the platform, according to Billboard. The article said that Agua is in the top 5 because everyone was doing the challenge, and it all happened organically. The biggest influencers in Latin America vibed with the song, wanted to do the challenge, and did it. We learned a lot. TikTok is very important in today’s music.

@jbalvin

Baile de AGUA

♬ Agua (Music from “Sponge on the Run” Movie) – Tainy & J Balvin

Another example can be seen with KAROL G’s Ay, DiOs Mío!. The part on TikTok is not the chorus. As well as with Tattoo Remix, by Rauw Alejandro and Camilo, I think the part that they used wasn’t the chorus either.

Q: Is NEON16 considered an independent label?

A: Yeah, we’re independent, but we have a partnership with Interscope. We’re an independent label but we have partners where we release music and Interscope is one of them. We have Republic Records, as well, for another artist we signed. It’s just doing partnerships with different labels until we can be completely on our own and distribute completely on our own.

Q: I saw an Instagram post on HUMAN (X) (@humanx), would you like to talk a little bit more about what it is?

A: HUMAN (X) is a multimedia charity initiative that we launched in partnership with Charlie Guerrero, which is Sofía Reyes’ manager (she’s an artist), Tommy Mottola, and NEON16. We are gonna be releasing several records under HUMAN (X).

When you look us up on Spotify, HUMAN (X) appears as an artist and we just released our first record called Pa’ La Cultura with David Guetta and other featured artists. All the streams, all the royalties that we receive from that song, are gonna be donated to an organization that we chose for this record called NDLON, which is the National Day Laborer Organizing Network that helps immigrants work in the United States. Everything we raise is going to be donated to them because a lot of them were affected during the pandemic.

We also labeled today [Sept 15th] as Pa’ La Cultura day. We’re doing a lot of initiatives to keep raising money for this foundation. This record is in Spanish but the next one might be in English so it’s gonna have a variety of genres and languages so we can give HUMAN (X) a. global aspect.

At NEON, we like to do stuff like that. We like to innovate, to lead different types of events, types of projects. We also did the first Latin gaming event in the industry. A big tournament like Esports. We like to do stuff that’s out of the box that makes us stand out from the rest of the labels and other companies.

Sebastian Van Hemert | IG @sebastianvanhemert | LinkedIn | Linktree
Categories
New Music

#FMSpotlight: Arcangel – “Los Favoritos 2” (Listen)

On Friday, October 16th, popular Reggaetón and Latin Trap legend Arcangel (@arcangel) released his sixth studio album Los Favoritos 2. This album is the sequel to his successful Los Favoritos record, which came out in 2015 and is considered a modern classic within the genre.

LF2 was filled with 28 features in total ranging from other established legends such as Wisin y Yandel to up-and-coming superstars such as Myke Towers. So far, the most popular release on the project is Sigues Con Él (Remix), which came out as a single earlier this year and already has about 122M views on YouTube.

 A Correr los Lakers (Remix)
Arcangel in the ‘A Correr los Lakers’ music video

“I don’t plan on stopping to give y’all music for a long time. Just as long as both God and my heart allow it! We’re not going to stop because all of y’all are the ones in charge here and y’all deserve MORE!”Arcangel

Arcángel, La Maravilla

Austin Santos was born in New York City (1985) and eventually moved to Puerto Rico for good in 2002. He was interested in becoming a Reggaetón performera contemporary Latin American urban music genre. In PR, he would form part of the classic, then-underground act, Arcángel & De La Ghetto. The duo eventually went on to make songs that became popular among fans in the U.S. and PR (Genius.com).

They separated shortly thereafter and, since then, Arca‘s solo-career has been controversially impeccable. He has established himself as a pillar within the industry, putting out hits consistently since his rise to fame in the mid-200s. He has also served as a mentor to several new talents.

#FMSpotlight: Arcangel - Los Favoritos 2 (Listen)

Arcangel played an instrumental role in the initial success of a young Bad Bunny. They collaborated on many popular tracks such as Tu No Vive Asi, Me Acostumbre, and Original during Latin Trap’s peak in the mid-to-late-2010s. Dj Luian (@djluian), CEO of Hear This Music (label that first signed El Conejo), was the bridge between the two as he was Bad Bunny’s producer at the time and he had been Arcangel’s producer in the past. In fact, Arcangel’s first iteration of Los Favoritos (2015) was a collaborative effort between the two.

Sebastian Van Hemert | IG @sebastianvanhemert | LinkedIn | Linktree
Categories
New Music

#FMSpotlight: Ozuna – “ENOC” (Listen)

On September 4th, 2020 the Puerto Rican Reggaetón & Latin Trap global sensation, Ozuna (@ozuna), released his fourth studio album titled “ENOC,” which stands for El Negrito de Ojos Claros. ENOC came packed with several features. These include superstars like J Balvin, up-and-coming artists like Myke Towers, and living legend Daddy Yankee. There is even a track featuring Doja Cat!

ENOC: Old-School Ozuna?

Ozuna stated the following in a recent press release:

“ENOC is an album that means a lot to me, as it is a reflection of the musical essence that marked the beginning of my career”

In a way, ENOC as a whole is a throwback to Ozuna’s old-school self. The name of the record, for instance, is an acronym that references his trademark catchphrase: El Negrito de Ojos Claros. Then, the dreadlocks he’s been growing out recently resemble the classic Ozuna look. But most importantly, OG fans are able to recognize this essence he speaks of within the music itself…

What makes ENOC unique is the modern twist given to an older sound. The genre has collectively evolved since the beginning of Ozuna’s career so accomplishing this was essential. He and his team were able to find a good midpoint between the sound that put him on the map and the sound that is popular right now.

First, Ozuna brings back his characteristic high-pitched, perreo voice for tracks like “Mala” and “Una Locura.”

Then, he pays homage to Reggaetón culture in the tracks “Enemigos Ocultos” and “El Reggaetón.” Enemigos Ocultos is a malianteo, which is the hardcore subgenre within Reggaetón music that touches on street life themes and usually includes an entourage of artists. El Reggaetón is a nod to the genre and its movement. This is a trend that other artists like Bad Bunny, Anuel AA, and J Balvin have hopped on too.

Sebastian Van Hemert | IG @sebastianvanhemert | LinkedIn | Linktree

Related Post: #FMSpotlight: Feid – “BAHÍA DUCATI” (Listen)