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Reggaeton in New York City

Reggaeton in New York City is mostly in stadiums, arenas, night clubs, and on the streets. Latin trap and Dominican dem bow are branches. La Boom in Woodside, Queens regularly presents reggaeton artists and DJs.

Rauw Alejandro in 2022 (Fernandez Jimenez/Dreamstime)

Rauw Alejandro “Cosa Nuestra Tour” Turns Puerto Rican Reggaeton into Smooth Pop

BARCLAYS CENTER, Prospect Heights, Brooklyn 🇵🇷

Continue Reading Rauw Alejandro “Cosa Nuestra Tour” Turns Puerto Rican Reggaeton into Smooth Pop

Mega Mezcla (Val_th/Dreamstime)

Mega Mezcla 2025 Alex Sensation Features Anuel AA, Sech. Kapo, Beele, De La Ghetto, Ken-Y, Fariana, Jey One, Crazy Design, Vakero, with a special presentation by Elvis Crespo

PRUDENTIAL CENTER, Newark, New Jersey, reggaeton, latin trap, merengue, dembow 🇨🇴 🇩🇴 🇵🇦 🇵🇷

Continue Reading Mega Mezcla 2025 Alex Sensation Features Anuel AA, Sech. Kapo, Beele, De La Ghetto, Ken-Y, Fariana, Jey One, Crazy Design, Vakero, with a special presentation by Elvis Crespo

Nicky Jam (courtesy)

Nicky Jam Headlines Mega Bash Reggaeton by Alex Sensation

PRUDENTIAL CENTER, Newark, New Jersey 🇵🇷

Continue Reading Nicky Jam Headlines Mega Bash Reggaeton by Alex Sensation

Alex Sensation is on e of New York's top Latin DJs. (courtesy)

Alex Sensation Hosts Mega Bash

PRUDENTIAL CENTER, Newark, New Jersey 🇨🇴
LA MEGA 97.9FM 🇨🇴

Continue Reading Alex Sensation Hosts Mega Bash

Farruko (Kobby Dagan/Dreamstime)

Farruko Headlines Mega Bash 2024 by Alex Sensation

PRUDENTIAL CENTER, Newark, New Jersey 🇵🇷

Continue Reading Farruko Headlines Mega Bash 2024 by Alex Sensation

Mega Bash Alex Sensation (DisobeyArt/Adobe)

Mega Bash Alex Sensation Features Mega Bash Alex Sensation 2024 features Farruko, Nicky Jam, Vico C, Chimbala, La Insuperable and more Dembow, Reggaeton, and Trap

PRUDENTIAL CENTER, Newark, New Jersey 🇨🇴 🇩🇴 🇵🇷

Continue Reading Mega Bash Alex Sensation Features Mega Bash Alex Sensation 2024 features Farruko, Nicky Jam, Vico C, Chimbala, La Insuperable and more Dembow, Reggaeton, and Trap

Ivy Queen (Tommy Chung/Carnegie Hall)

Ivy Queen La Diva, The Queen of Reggaeton, Makes Her Carnegie Hall Debut

CARNEGIE HALL, Midtown, Manhattan 🇵🇷

Continue Reading Ivy Queen La Diva, The Queen of Reggaeton, Makes Her Carnegie Hall Debut

Global Citizen Festival (Decaale/Dreamstime)

Global Citizen Festival Features ALOK, Doja Cat, Rauw Alejandro, Raye and More

GREAT LAWN, Central Park 🇧🇷 🇬🇭 🇵🇷 🇿🇦 🇰🇷

Continue Reading Global Citizen Festival Features ALOK, Doja Cat, Rauw Alejandro, Raye and More

Maluma (Billboard Music Awards)

Maluma “Don Juan Tour” in New York City

PALLADIUM TIMES SQUARE, Times Square Theater District, Manhattan 🇨🇴

Continue Reading Maluma “Don Juan Tour” in New York City

Latin Alternative Music Conference, LAMC (Krakenimages/Adobe)

Latin Alternative Music Conference (LAMC) Brings Alt Rock Fusions to NYC

INTERCONTINENTAL HOTEL, Times Square, Manhattan
DROM, East Village, Manhattan
CENTRAL PARK, Manhattan
SOBs, Hudson Square, Manhattan
🇨🇴 🇨🇺 🇩🇴 🇭🇰 🇮🇹 🇲🇽 🇵🇦 🇵🇷 🇪🇸 🇻🇪 🇻🇪

Continue Reading Latin Alternative Music Conference (LAMC) Brings Alt Rock Fusions to NYC

More Reggaeton

Sponsors

Thank you for sponsoring reggaeton in New York City:

  • Carnegie Hall

New York Reggaeton News

Barclays Center, Brooklyn’s Big Arena, Presents Big Latin Stars

Ana Gabriel, Mexican pop 🇲🇽
Peso Pluma, Mexican corridos tumbados 🇲🇽
Myke Towers, Puerto Rican reggaeton 🇵🇷
Barak, Dominican Christian 🇩🇴
Christian Nodal, regional Mexican 🇲🇽
Marc Anthony, Puerto Rican salsa 🇵🇷
Buju Banton, Jamaican dancehall 🇯🇲
Chayanne, Puerto Rican pop 🇵🇷
Shakira, Colombian pop 🇨🇴
Mariah Carey, Venezuelan American holidays 🇻🇪 🇺🇸

PROSPECT HEIGHTS, Brooklyn

Prudential Center Presents Latin Music Stars in Newark

Colombian Independence Festival: Grupo Niche, Gran Combo, La India, Jessie Uribe, Paola Jara, Francy, Alex Sensation salsa and regional Mexican 🇨🇴
Don Omar “Back to Reggaeton Tour” 🇵🇷
Chayanne “Bailemos Otra Vez Tour” Puerto Rican pop 🇵🇷

NEWARK, New Jersey

House of Yes is One of New York’s Wildest Night Clubs

HOUSE OF GROOVES Eli Escobar and Ultra Violet, Puerto Rican and Dominican house 🇵🇷 🇩🇴
ROSA PERREO reggaeton house 🇵🇷
OUI OUI BASTILLE DAY Dimitri from Paris, Legitime, Ÿas, French house 🇫🇷

BUSHWICK, Brooklyn

Theater at Madison Square Garden Presents Major Latin Artists

Mon Laferte “Autopoiética Tour” featuring XImena Sariñana, Chilean Mexican alternative 🇨🇱 🇲🇽
Zucchero Overdose D’Amore World Tour, Italian alternative rock 🇮🇹
Jay Wheeler Trappii Tour, Puerto Rican reggaeton and trap 🇵🇷

CHELSEA, Manhattan

New York Reggaeton

Reggaeton in New York City (Tatiana Chekryzhova/Dreamstime)
Reggaeton in New York City (Tatiana Chekryzhova/Dreamstime)

New York City played a role in reggaeton’s development. Jamaican Panamanians brought it to New York and switched from singing in Jamaican patois to Spanish. From Brooklyn, Vico C took the rhythm to the caserios (public housing) in San Juan, Puerto Rico where it developed.

Today young men boom reggaeton from their cars in a macho display. Stores play reggaeton to attract customers.

Reggaeton Clubs in NYC

There aren’t any reggaeton-specific venues, but you can dance reggaeton at these places:

La Boom nightclub; in Woodside, Queens; hosts a Spanglish Saturdays dance party of urban Latin music with a lot of reggaeton. There may be reggaeton DJs on Friday night too.

Sabor Latino restaurant and night club in Elmhurst, Queens presents some reggaeton.

Reggaeton Concerts in NYC

There are three big reggaeton concerts in Metro New York City:

  • Mega Bash Alex Sensation is a concert of reggaeton and Latin trap stars
  • Mega Mezcla Alex Sensation is a concert of reggaeton and Latin trap stars
  • Soulfrito

Reggaeton Radio in NYC

Colombian DJ Alex Sensation is a popular reggaeton DJ on La Mega 97.9FM.

Reggaeton Theatre in NYC

Repertorio Español’s “La Canción” is a reggaeton musical with music by Vico C. 🇵🇷

Reggaeton Artists

Rauw Alejandro is a Puerto Rican reggaeton, Latin trap, and pop singer. He is one of the artists who is softening and stretching reggaeton and trap with his R&B and pop sensibilities. 🇵🇷

Reggaeton Origins

Today reggaeton is some of the world’s most popular youth music, but it had a long journey through many different cultures. The lyrics and videos can be naughty and even misogynistic. But if you can get over that, it’s great music and dance.

The music has already gone through its softening phase in the same way that hard rock evolved into soft rock, and salsa dura (hard salsa) evolved into salsa romántica. It’s also become part of many urban music fusions.

The world’s youth music traveled from Jamaica, to Panama, to New York City, to Puerto Rico, and then to Colombia, and around the world.

Jamaica to Panama

Reggaeton’s story begins with Jamaican reggae and dancehall. Reggae has clave in it, the African and Diaspora bell pattern that is the base of a lot of Latin music, so reggae and Latin go well together. 🇯🇲

Jamaicans finishing the Panama Canal brought their music with them. Bus drivers hired Jamaicans to sing reggae “pregones” (advertising songs). Panamanians brought them to New York City. 🇵🇦

El General

El General’s “Tu Pum Pum”

DJ El General, a Panamanian DJ studying in New York, noticed that fans got more excited when he sang in Spanish than in Jamaican patois, so he began singing Reggae en Español. 🗽

Vico C

New York Puerto Rican Vico C brought Reggae en Español from Brooklyn to Puerto Rico where mixtape culture developed in the caserios (public housing) of barrio Puerta Tierra in San Juan. “La Recta Final” (1994) was his first chart. You can hear the New York hip hop influence. At first the Puerto Rican government tried to ban and shut it down. That never works. 🇵🇷

Don Omar, from Villa Palmeras, Santurce, San Juan, Puerto Rico, picked up from Vico C. Villa Palmeras produces many famous musicians.

Puerto Rican singer Daddy Yankee coined the term “reggaeton.” His 2004 global hit “Gasolina” introduced the rhythm to the world. 🇵🇷

The music jumped to Medellín, Colombia. 🇨🇴

Luis Fonsi’s “Despacito” got the entire world singing in Spanish in 2017. The video was shot in La Perla, the beautiful shantytown outside the walls of Old San Juan. 🇵🇷

Reggaeton is now the global sound of today’s youth. Kids everywhere listen and dance to it, and it keeps growing and changing.

Dem Bow

Dominican dem bow is an interesting offshoot from barrio Capotillo 42, one of the most disadvantaged and dangerous neighborhoods in Santo Domingo. Dem bow lyrics and videos are extremely naughty, misogynistic, and promote bad behavior ~ even worse than reggaeton. But if you can get over that, the music and dance are great. It’s the sound Dominican youth today, and Puerto Ricans are visiting Capotillo 42 to make music with the Dominicans. Rauw Alejandro and Angel Dior’s “Tamo en Nota” is a great example of this.

Rauw Alejandro and Angel Dior’s “Tamo en Nota” (February 2023)

Perreo

Perreo is the reggaeton dance. It’s booty shaking and if she wants to, a woman will rub her butt on her partner. It looks naughty, but the woman is in control. Women often dance with each other. A skilled dancer can make her butt cheeks move as if they have lives of their own.

Americans call it twerking, but generally look funny doing it, and don’t move with the same feeling. Perreo is kind of silly in a club because you have to stay cool, but with a skilled dancer you care about, in private at home, it’s special. Oh. ¡Agua!

“Perreo” derives from “perra” or bitch because a female dog will mate with most any dog. Careful, perra can be very rude in Spanish.

In the reggaeton context, perreo is from Puerto Rico, but the movements are actually common in puberty rituals in Mother Africa and many cultures around the world. In general the European Diaspora is uptight about hip motion, but the African Diaspora is not. It’s natural. There is nothing new under the sun.


Published September 24, 2024 ~ Updated September 24, 2024.

Filed Under: Latin Dance Categories, Latin Music Categories

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