Talento de Barrio | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album / Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | August 12, 2008 | |||
Recorded | 2005, 2007–08 at El Cartel Records, Puerto Rico | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 54:08 | |||
Label | ||||
Producer |
| |||
Daddy Yankee chronology | ||||
| ||||
Alternative cover | ||||
Singles from Talento de Barrio | ||||
|
Talento de Barrio (English:Hood Talent) is the soundtrack album to the film of the same name and the fifth studio album starring Puerto Rican reggaeton singer-songwriter Daddy Yankee,who also performs the songs on the album. It was released on August 12,2008,by Machete Music and El Cartel Records,to accompany the motion picture Talento de Barrio. The album was mainly produced by reggaeton producers Eli El Musicólogo and Menes. [2] The album production explores reggaeton with elements of tropical music such as merengue and dancehall along with EDM and electropop sounds. It receive positive reviews and was nominated for Best Urban Album at the 10th Annual Latin Grammy Awards. The album was supported by four official singles:"Somos de Calle","Pose","Llamado de Emergencia",and "Que Tengo Que Hacer?".
The album was a commercial success selling over one million of copies worldwide. In the United States,the album debut at the top of Billboard Top Latin Albums and received a double platinum (Latin Field) certification by the RIAA with an excess of 200,000 copies,platinum in Argentina and Central America. To promote de album,Yankee embarked in his third official world tour Talento de Barrio Tour. Following the success of the album,Daddy Yankee was named by CNN as the Most Influential Hispanic Artist of 2009 and was the most searched artist on Google in Argentina of 2009. [3] [4] [5] [6]
Daddy Yankee recorded the movie Talento de Barrio between March and June 2005. It was his first movie starring as main character. On the same year,he started to record the soundtrack recording the tracks "Somos de Calle" and "No es Culpa Mia" produced by Luny Tunes. The trailer was released on the DVD of Barrio Fino en Directo on December 13,2005. [7] According to Yankee,the movie was set to be released in mid-2006 and was going to be distributed by Paramount Pictures. [8] Later,he stated that the new released date of the movie was going to be in October 2007,along with the soundtrack. [9] However,the movie was released on July 13,2008,independently via separate distribution agreements in various countries. [10]
The official recording sessions of the album started on the end December 2007,following the end of the first leg of his The Big Boss Tour . [11] According to Yankee,he was "more relaxed and without restlessness" during the production of the album,since he had total control as executive producer,unlike his last album, El Cartel III:The Big Boss (2007),co-produced with Interscope. [12]
A promotional EP was released wiith 5 tracks,including Block Party with Yaga &Mackie that was leaked online before it official radio released,Talento de Barrio remix with De La Guetto,Randy &Arcangel and two promotional singles La Fuga and Solido,that latter were included on the Best Buy exclusive edition of the soundtrack. On the same year,Yankee signed two music producers,Musicologo and Menes to his label. The two formed latter formed the duo Los de la Nazza and produced most of the album. The album was recorded on Mas Flow Inc Studios,with the participation of Predikador,Tainy and Luny Tunes. [13]
According to the artist,the album explores a wide array of musical styles. The album has an overall urban-R&B vibe,and also has many different musical styles like dance music,salsa,bachata and reggaeton. The album did not follow the crossover trend of his previous album El Cartel The Big Boss (2007) and did not included English-language tracks. [14] During the recording seasons,Yankee expressed his desired to record a more harcore reggaeton album,Although all the songs on Talento de Barrio are different in music style,they all revolve around the same subjects of the film. Talento de Barrio [the film] relates the struggles young people face when they try to improve their lives and break free from their troubled surroundings. The lead single "Pose" presents a mix of hip hop and dance,with Latin and African American rhythms. Llamado de Emergencia s A vallenato-pop influenced track,Que Tengo Que Hacer is a Dance Hall while Somos de Calle and title track are Hip Hop.
When I'm at shows, I see almost everyone with a camera, and they're all trying to give the best pose, especially the women. It's interesting to me how we're always trying to look good. That's the inspiration for the song.
— Raymond Ayala
Several songs, including "Sólido" and "Somos de Calle", were uploaded to Daddy Yankee's MySpace profile several months before the release of the soundtrack. Released as free single downloads at the time, were not announced to be included on the soundtrack until mid-Summer 2008, when promotion of the film Talento de Barrio would be disclosed. The planned musical style of the soundtrack would not be recognized until May 2008 when Daddy Yankee released the soundtrack's first single "Pose". The purpose for the soundtrack is to promote the film, A planned re-release, entitled Daddy Yankee Mundial, which later ended to be his next studio album.
Following the released of the album, Yankee embarked in a series of public and personal appearances, similar way of the previous promo cycle of El Cartel: The Big Boss . This include TV shows with large Hispanic audiences such as Don Francisco Presenta and El Show del Cristina. Some of the songs of the soundtrack such as "Somos de Calle" and "Pose", were included in the set list of the last leg of his Big Boss Tour . In October 2008, Daddy Yankee's cologne was started to sell on Macys and was promoted by TV ads accompany with the music of the lead single Pose. In the same way, in November 2008, Pose was air ABC's "Ugly Betty. [15] [16]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [17] |
Billboard | (favorable) |
Talento de Barrio receive mostly positive reviews by critics. Jason Birchmeier from AllMusic compared the album favorably with his previous album and stated " Talento de Barrio is an all-around better album than El Cartel: The Big Boss. Not only is it more stylistically consistent and more reasonably paced at 15 songs in less than an hour's time; most importantly, it sticks with what's already proven successful". [18]
In the United States, the album debut at the top of Billboard Latin Albums and Latin Rhythm Albums selling 26,000 copies in the first week. The soundtrack became a major debuting success on the Billboard 200, peaking at number 13. [19] It dropped to number 23 the week after, and eventually to number 35. Its final charting position was at number 191, as of December 13, 2008. [20] As of April 2009, it sold over 170,000 copies. Eventually, it was certified two times platinum (Latin Field) by RIAA for shipping over 200,000 copies in the United States. [21] It also became entered in the Top 5 of the Billboard Top Soundtracks chart peaking at number 3, becoming Daddy Yankee's first Top 5 soundtrack on the Top Soundtracks chart. The soundtrack is also Yankee's fourth consecutive number-one album on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart.
The album debut with 122,000 copies worldwide. [22] The album was a commercial success across Latin American and was certified platinum in Argentina and Gold in Peru. In Argentina, the album debut and peaked at number 5. It was certified platinum for selling over 40,000 copies and was the 7th best selling album of 2009 in the country. [23] In Central America, Talento de Barrio was certified gold for selling over 5,000 copies and 250,000 digital downloads in Central America. [24] In Venezuela, it debut and peaked at number one of the retail album charts according to Recordland. [25] It also, it peaked at number 28 in Mexico Album Charts and number 12 in Ecuador. [26]
The lead single, "Pose", was released digitally via MySpace on May 14, 2008, and officially released to online music stores on the day of the album's release. It is the most successful charting single from the album, peaking at number 4 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart in August 2008.
A promotional single, "Somos de Calle", was released as a radio promo in mid-Summer 2008. It was released online, along with its video. Though not as successful as the album's lead single, the song still gets video play on music video television networks, as well as minor airplay. The video, as well as the lyrics, is more like the film in subject matter
The second single, "Llamado de Emergencia", was released on September 23, 2008. A vallenato-pop influenced track, the single made a modest debut at number 26 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart, and has so far peaked at number 21. [27] [28] The third single, "¿Qué Tengo Que Hacer?", was released on January 19, 2009. It has so far peaked at number 11 on the Billboard Latin Rhythm Airplay chart. [29]
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Talento de Barrio" | 3:07 |
2. | "Pa-Kum-Pa!!" | 3:20 |
3. | "Temblor" | 3:15 |
4. | "Pose" | 3:37 |
5. | "Llamado de Emergencia" | 3:59 |
6. | "Oasis de Fantasía" | 3:05 |
7. | "Salgo pa' la Calle" (featuring Randy) | 4:27 |
8. | "¿Qué Tengo Que Hacer?" | 3:38 |
9. | "Suelta" | 3:29 |
10. | "De la Paz y de la Guerra" | 3:56 |
11. | "Pasión" (featuring Arcángel) | 3:55 |
12. | "Come y Vete" | 3:41 |
13. | "K-ndela" | 3:41 |
14. | "Infinito" | 3:16 |
15. | "Somos de Calle" | 3:14 |
Total length: | 54:08 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
16. | "La Fuga" | 3:28 |
17. | "Solido" | 3:28 |
Total length: | 61:04 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Solido" | |
2. | "Fiel Amiga" | |
3. | "Block Party (feat. Yaga & Mackie)" | |
4. | "Talento de barrio (feat. Randy & Arcángel & De La Ghetto)" | |
5. | "La fuga" |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Somos de Calle" (remix) (featuring Arcángel, De La Ghetto, Guelo Star, MC Ceja, Julio Voltio, Ñejo, Chyno Nyno, Cosculluela, Baby Rasta) | 6:31 |
2. | "Pégalo" | 2:56 |
3. | "La Fuga" | 3:16 |
4. | "Quiero Decirte" (featuring Arcángel) | 3:42 |
5. | "No Comprende" | 3:30 |
6. | "Échale Pique" | 3:10 |
7. | "Bailando Fue" (featuring Jowell & Randy) | 4:17 |
8. | "Come y Vete" (bachata version) | 2:58 |
9. | "Fiel Amiga" | 3:11 |
10. | "Sólido" | 3:32 |
11. | "Salgo pa' la Calle" (remix) (featuring Randy, Erre XI) | 4:31 |
12. | "¿Qué Tengo Que Hacer? (Mambo Version)" (featuring Omega) | 5:18 |
13. | "Los Buenos Tiempos" | 3:20 |
14. | "El Ritmo No Perdona" | 3:03 |
15. | "¿Qué Tengo Que Hacer? (Remix)" (featuring Jowell & Randy) | 3:22 |
16. | "Échale Pique" (remix) (featuring Yomo) | 3:10 |
17. | "Mi Testamento (Más Problemas)" | 2:45 |
Credits adapted from the CD information, where Daddy Yankee is credited as Raymond Ayala instead of Ramón Ayala, and Los De La Nazza are credited as Los De La Nasa.
|
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Argentina (CAPIF) [40] | Platinum | 40,000^ |
Central America (CFC) [41] | Gold | 5,000 [41] |
Central America (CFC) [41] Digital download | Platinum | 250,000 [41] |
United States (RIAA) [6] | 2× Platinum (Latin) | 200,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
Reggaeton, is a modern style of popular and electronic music that originated in Panamá during the late 1980s, and which rose to prominence in the late 1990s and early 2000s through a plethora of Puerto Rican musicians. It has evolved from dancehall, with elements of hip hop, Latin American, and Caribbean music. Vocals include toasting/rapping and singing, typically in Spanish.
Ramón Luis Ayala Rodríguez, known professionally as Daddy Yankee, is a Puerto Rican rapper who rose to worldwide prominence in 2004 with the song "Gasolina". Dubbed the "King of Reggaeton", he is often cited as an influence by other Hispanic urban performers. He retired on December 3, 2023, after completing his final stage performance on his "La Meta" tour in Puerto Rico.
Luny Tunes is an American reggaeton production duo consisting of Francisco Saldaña (Luny) and Víctor Cabrera (Tunes) who have been known for creating unique musical rhythms for some of the most popular reggaeton artists since the early 2000s.
Barrio Fino is the third studio album by Puerto Rican rapper Daddy Yankee, released on July 13, 2004, in the United States by VI Music and El Cartel Records and internationally by Machete Music and Polydor Records. Released two years after his previous studio album, El Cangri.com (2002), the album was recorded in Puerto Rico between 2003 and 2004. It explores themes ranging from dance, sex, romance, introspection, and protest against political corruption and violence against women. Barrio Fino was instrumental in popularizing reggaeton in the mainstream market, enhancing Daddy Yankee's career, as well as cementing his status as one of the most successful Latin artists of the 2000s. The album is reported to have sold over 8 million copies in the world.
"Pose" is the first single by Puerto Rico reggaeton artist Daddy Yankee from the movie soundtrack to the motion picture Talento de Barrio, and was released on May 14, 2008, by Machete Music and El Cartel Records. The single was made available through online music stores on August 12, 2008. The song features different musical styles, ones that differ from Daddy Yankee's past singles. It is an electro song, which fuses other genres such as latin pop, dance-pop, pop rap, dance, hip hop and pop, as well as Latin and dance rhythms.
Talento de barrio is a film released on October 10, 2008, by Maya Entertainment, starring Daddy Yankee. The film was directed by José Iván Santiago, and written by George Rivera and Ángel M. Sanjurjo, with additional material by Edgar Soberón Torchia. It was also the first movie Daddy Yankee co-produced. In the United States it was a major success, although it was not launched in all the country. It was shown in the major cities like New York City, Los Angeles, and some parts of New Jersey.
Pa'l Mundo is the fourth studio album by Puerto Rican reggaeton duo Wisin & Yandel, released on November 8, 2005, by Machete Music.
Paul Frederick Irizarry Suau,, known professionally as Echo, is a Puerto Rican record producer and songwriter.
King Daddy, also known as Imperio Nazza: King Daddy Edition, is a mixtape by Puerto Rican rapper Daddy Yankee, released independently on October 29, 2013 by his label El Cartel Records, a year after his seventh studio album, Prestige. King Daddy is a "hardcore reggaeton" record made for the genre's "lovers" and features collaborations with Arcángel, Divino, Farruko, J Álvarez, and Yandel. Daddy Yankee co-wrote and co-produced all 11 tracks with Benny Benni and Los de la Nazza, respectively; it is his last album produced by the latter, who left El Cartel Records in 2014.
"Somos de Calle" is a promo single by Puerto Rican reggaeton performer Daddy Yankee, released for promotion of the 2008 film Talento de Barrio. It was released on July 29, 2008 by El Cartel Records.
"Llamado de Emergencia" is the second single by Puerto Rican reggaeton artist Daddy Yankee from the soundtrack to the motion picture Talento de Barrio, released on September 23, 2008, by El Cartel Records. It is the third released promo single and second official single.
The discography of Puerto Rican rapper, singer-songwriter and producer Daddy Yankee has released eight studio albums, two live albums, 111 singles, and one soundtrack. He made his debut on DJ Playero's Playero 34 mixtape, released in 1991. He was later featured on Playero's 37 and 38 albums, before releasing his first solo record in 1995, titled No Mercy. During the rest of the 1990s, he continued working on underground reggaeton records and released his first album as producer El Cartel de Yankee in 1997. After the release of his 2001 independent album El Cartel II: Los Cangris, he released his second studio album, El Cangri.com, in June 2002. It is cited as the record that made him notorious outside his natal Puerto Rico, being his music introduced in New York City and Miami. Without any major label backing him, El Cangri.com managed to peak at number 43 on the US Top Latin Albums chart. A track from the album, "Brugal Mix", became his first Billboard chart entry by peaking at number 40 on the US Tropical Songs chart in November 2002.
The 2009 Billboard Latin Music Awards was held on Thursday, April 23, 2009 at the BankUnited Center at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida, United States. It is produced and broadcast lived on Telemundo network. The nominees were announced on Tuesday, February 17, 2009 during a live televised morning show Levantate on Telemundo network.
Mundial ('Worldwide') is the sixth studio album and tenth overall by Puerto Rican rapper Daddy Yankee through El Cartel Records and Sony Music Latin released on April 27, 2010. The album was supported by three official singles: "Grito Mundial", "Descontrol" and "La Despedida". The production explores different music genres than his previous records such as merengue, dance pop and Latin Pop along with reggaeton. It explores lyrics and themes such as romance, sex, money and fame while the main focus is to capture music vibes of the streets of different countries globally. The album was entirely produced by Los de la Nazza and Diesel.
"Shaky Shaky" is a single by Puerto Rican rapper Daddy Yankee that was intended to appear on his unreleased studio album El Disco Duro. The song was recorded in December 2015 as a freestyle during a recording session in Puerto Rico and later released on April 8, 2016 by El Cartel Records. The song was written by Daddy Yankee, Urbani "Urba" Mota and Luis "Rome" Romero. It was produced by Los Evo Jedis, the duo of Urbani Mota and Luis Romero.
Musicólogo & Menes, also known as Los de la Nazza, is a Puerto Rican urban music duo formed in 2005 by Eliezer "Musicólogo" García and Eduardo "Menes" López. The duo achieved significant popularity in the Latin urban music field during the late 2000s and early 2010s as producers of Puerto Rican rapper Daddy Yankee, combining elements of reggaeton music with electronica influences. Musicólogo is Daddy Yankee's cousin.
"Si Supieras" is a song by Puerto Rican rapper and singer Daddy Yankee and Puerto Rican duo Wisin & Yandel, released on June 28, 2019 by El Cartel Records. The track was written by Daddy Yankee, Wisin, Yandel, Rafael Pina, Eric "Lobo" Rodríguez, Juan "Gaby Music" Rivera, Francisco "Luny" Saldaña, and Marco "Tainy" Masis, and was produced by Dominican producer Luny and Puerto Rican producer Tainy.
Urbano music 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. The commercial breakthrough of this music took place in 2017 with artists from Colombia, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Panama, Puerto Rico, the United States, Venezuela and even non-Spanish-speaking nations, such as Brazil, where Portuguese is spoken.
Legendaddy is the eighth studio album by Puerto Rican rapper Daddy Yankee, released on March 24, 2022, by El Cartel Records, Universal Music Group and Republic Records. Published 10 years after his previous studio album, Legendaddy is Daddy Yankee's last record, as he announced that he would retire from music after the end of his farewell concert tour, La Última Vuelta, in 2023. He decided to retire while working on the album, as he felt accomplished and wanted to enjoy everything he had achieved with his career. It is his first and only album released directly under Universal, rather than its Latin division, after signing a multimillionaire global distribution deal in 2020.
The Talento de Barrio World Tour was the third concert tour by reggaeton singer Daddy Yankee to promote his album Talento de Barrio. The tour had two legs, the first in the United States and the last one in Latin America. It kick of at Viña del mar 2009 international festival and ended at Mar de Plata, Argentina on December 15, 2009.