Nadie sabe lo que va a pasar mañana


“Nadie sabe lo que va a pasar mañana”, Bad Bunny's latest album certainly hasn't left anyone indifferent. After a wait that seemed endless for his fans, the Puerto Rican artist has returned in style and without leaving anything behind. Don Benito had things to say, and he has said them. The reality is that no one knew what to expect from his new job. After A Summer Without You the bar was very high, with that album he had broken all records, it had become the most listened to in the history of Spotify and to this day some of his songs continue to appear on the weekly lists of the most reproduced on streaming platforms. The reggaeton, tropical rhythms and pop that served as the basis for his most acclaimed album have completely disappeared in his seventh work. The bad rabbit has returned to his origins with trap as the main source in his songs such as Mónaco, Vou 787 or Gracias por nada. Along with this we also find touches of techno, house, even Jersey Club, that subgenre of electronica that originated in Newark in the 2000s and also Latin Drill, thus opting for sounds opposite to those of 2022.


Lucia Lorenzatto

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