"The Latin American audience is rising," Trust says, "and I would think as that audience grows, it would make perfect sense that music targeted to that audience would cross over as well. "Bailando" out there, including a couple in Portuguese. Already, the market is so diverse that Latino artists don't have to pick just one language, or even two. Today, a quarter of this country's youths are Latino.
Trust thinks things have fundamentally changed since the days those older songs made it to the top of the charts. Rico Suave." That is, will it be another one to six years before the next Spanglish crossover? "Bailando" is just the latest "Macarena" or " "For it to be working there, again, is another sign that the song really doesn't seem to have any boundaries at this point," Trust says. Porn images Enrique Iglesias Bailando English Version Ft Sean, and bailando enrique iglesias song wikipedia the free, enrique iglesias bailando ft descemer. "Bailando" has rocked other Latino hubs like New York and Los Angeles. "Bailando" would survive the leap from the Latin market to the American market, but producers added a rap by Sean Paul - just to be safe.
It got a ton of airtime and it scored high on Shazam and iTunes.īased on that success, Republic Records guessed that "Bailando" crept into American markets last February, by way of Latin radio stations in Miami. 1 hit on theīillboard Hot 100 chart for 14 weeks," he says. "As much as people might chuckle at that song now, it was a No.
La Tortura" in 2005, and going back even further, " It just doesn't happen very often - "occasionally," Trust says. "It's romantic, it's sensual I think addictive is actually a perfect word to use for how the song totally comes together," Trust tells NPR's Arun Rath. Spanglish version of the song that broke into the American pop charts 21 weeks later, it isīillboard's associate director of charts/radio, says Iglesias toldīillboard that he thinks there's something "addictive" about the song. If you've been listening to American pop radio in the past five months or so, you likely heard Spanish singer Enrique Iglesias' hit song