Bad Bunny's new album celebrates Latin culture and features emotional, powerful tributes to his home, Puerto Rico. NBC's Valerie Castro explores how a new generation of fans is connecting to his work,
In our first Tracks report of 2025, SZA, Bad Bunny and a host of notable names are putting their stamp on their year in the very early goings. SZA Soars High Into The New Year Off Of Lana Success First up is SZA,
It’s a lesson Bad Bunny has taken to heart, or more likely, come to on his own, on “Debí Tirar Más Fotos,” the solo album the singer-rapper released Sunday with little of the protracted fanfare that accompanies most major albums.
Bad Bunny ‘s latest studio album DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOTos has officially made him the first Latin artist to log 100 entries on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
In “Debí Tirar Más Fotos” (“I Should’ve Taken More Photos”), his sixth studio album and love letter to Puerto Rico, Bad Bunny proves that there is no other musician in the world like him.
The commercial peak of Bad Bunny’s career so far has been the 2022 album “Un Verano Sin Ti,” his most musically ambitious and diverse release. “Tití Me Preguntó” shows him dabbling in Dominican dembow, a fast and salacious style, with equally fast and salacious lyrics.
Bad Bunny's 'Debi Tirar Mas Fotos' tops Billboard's Streaming Albums chart with the biggest streaming week for a Latin album in over a year.
Bad Bunny released his sixth studio album "Debí Tirar Màs Fotos," which celebrates Puerto Rico and its history.
This week, we get a fresh jolt of energy, as SZA and Lamar make way for two blockbuster debuts. Lil Baby enters the chart at No. 1 with WHAM — an acronym for "Who Hard As Me," not a tribute to the duo who spent last Christmas in the top 5 — which becomes the rapper's fourth consecutive chart-topper and seventh album to hit the top 10.
You won't want to turn the tv off on the Super Bowl 59 halftime show performer: Grammy award-winning rapper Kendrick Lamar.