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Ed Sheeran Teases a Major Comeback for 2025

December 23, 2024

Ed Sheeran, one of the most successful singer-songwriters of the modern era, is preparing for a big return to the pop music scene in 2025. After a quieter few years focused on collaborations and...

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Beabadoobee: The Indie Rock Sensation Redefining the Genre

December 23, 2024

Seamlessly transitioning between genres and effortlessly switching musical gears, beabadoobee stands as a masterful young artist whose unique sound bridges the best of indie rock’s nostalgic past...

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Kim Wilde: From Pop Princess to Gardening Queen and Back Again

December 23, 2024

Few artists embody the concept of reinvention as completely as Kim Wilde. From dominating the pop charts in the 1980s to cultivating a second career as a gardening expert, Wilde’s journey is...

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The Uncertain Road Ahead: Britney Spears and Her Potential Comeback

December 23, 2024

Britney Spears, a pop icon who has captivated audiences for decades, is once again at the center of media attention. As the star recently celebrated her 43rd birthday in Mexico, questions about her...

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Joe Jonas and Alex Warren Team Up for Powerful New Single ‘Everything I Had’

December 23, 2024

Joe Jonas and Alex Warren have joined forces for their latest collaboration, Everything I Had, a track that highlights the creative synergy between the two artists. Combining Jonas’ polished vocals...

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Zach Bryan: A Modern-Day Storyteller in Music

December 23, 2024

Zach Bryan, a name that resonates with authenticity, raw emotion, and heartfelt storytelling, has taken the music world by storm. With his distinct sound and poetic lyrics, he has become a voice...

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How Timothée Chalamet Found His Voice: Hollywood Coach Shares Training Secrets for Bob Dylan Role

December 23, 2024

Timothée Chalamet’s transformation into music legend Bob Dylan for the upcoming biopic Going Electric is already generating buzz, but what does it take for an acclaimed actor to embody one of the...

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How Phoebe Bridgers Found Her Voice: The Albums That Shaped a Modern Indie Icon

December 22, 2024

Phoebe Bridgers has become a defining voice in indie music, seamlessly blending raw vulnerability with hauntingly beautiful soundscapes. Whether she’s performing solo in her now-iconic skeleton...

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The Uncertain Future of Music Jobs: Study Warns of Massive Cuts in the Next Four Years

December 22, 2024

A recent report commissioned by the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers (CISAC) has raised alarms within the music industry, predicting that the rise of generative...

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Hozier’s Latest Hit, ‘Too Sweet’, Showcases His Mastery of Soulful Storytelling

December 22, 2024

Hozier, the Irish singer-songwriter known for his poetic lyrics and soulful melodies, is making waves once again with his latest single, “Too Sweet”. Released on March 22, 2024, as part of his EP...

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Spotify Wrapped 2024: Taylor Swift Tops the Charts as Women Lead the Global Albums List

December 22, 2024

Spotify Wrapped 2024 has officially dropped, and it’s no surprise that Taylor Swift reigns supreme as the most-streamed artist of the year. Her chart-topping success is a testament to her enduring...

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Harry’s House of Pop Culture: A Space for Fans to Be Themselves

December 22, 2024

Harry Styles, a name synonymous with groundbreaking fashion and boundary-pushing artistry, has become a cultural icon whose influence transcends music. From a young talent on *The X Factor* to a...

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Crafting the Bounce in Modern LatinPop Using Bad Bunny

Sabrina Carpenter’s Short n’ Sweet

Bad Bunny’s 2026 Super Bowl show didn’t just break viewing records—it confirmed that the “global sound” (Latin music, Afrobeats, Amapiano, Afro-fusion) is now the center of pop culture, not a side genre. If you’re learning to mix music, that means one thing: you have to get your low-end and drums right, because that’s where these styles live.​​

Why this moment matters culturally. Bad Bunny’s halftime show put Spanish-language music and Latin culture at the literal center of the biggest TV event in the United States, with over 128 million people watching. His performance and speech highlighted identity, migration, and belonging, turning a pop show into a statement about who “belongs” in mainstream America.​​

At the same time, artists like Burna Boy, Wizkid, Davido, Rema, Tems, and Tyla have pushed Afrobeats and African pop from regional scenes into arenas, award shows, and global charts. Tyla’s Grammy win for “Water” in the new African music category was a clear sign that African genres aren’t just a trend and they’re being formally recognized and archived as part of global pop history as they should have been a long time ago.

So when you’re learning to mix global pop, Afrobeats, or Latin trap, you’re not just chasing a sound—you’re working inside a cultural wave built on groove, community, and dance.

What makes Latin / Afrobeats drums different? For beginners, think of these genres as rhythm-first music. The vocal and melodies are important, but the feel comes from drums and bass.

Typical traits you’ll hear:

  • Strong, deep bass (808s or subs) that carry the groove rather than just sitting under it.​
  • Syncopated percussion: shakers, congas, rim clicks, log drums, toms, and hats that hit between the main beats to create bounce.​
  • Repetition with small variations: the pattern loops, but small fills and extra hits keep it alive.​

Afrobeats, especially, is built on swing and subtle push/pull in the groove, with drums that feel relaxed but still powerful. Latin trap and reggaetón lean on recognizable patterns (like the dembow rhythm), but they’re constantly updated with modern 808s and trap-style drums.​

If your kick, 808, and percussion fight each other, the track stops feeling like global pop and starts feeling muddy.

A simple way to think about it:

  • Let one sound be the “boss” of the low end (usually the 808 or sub).
  • Use EQ to carve lanes: cut some low frequencies from the kick where the 808 is strongest, and remove unnecessary lows from percussion so it doesn’t crowd the bass.
  • Use sidechain compression so the 808 ducks slightly when the kick hits, giving you that clean, club-ready bounce without losing weight.

Modern mixing tools make this much easier. Visual EQs help you see which sounds are fighting, and sidechain features let you shape the bounce in a few clicks. When you get this right, your tracks not only hit harder in the club but also connect to a global sound that’s reshaping what pop music is.

Crafting the Bounce in Modern LatinPop Using Bad Bunnycrafting-the-bounce-in-modern-latinpop-using-bad-bunnyJaisha VallianiMar 02, 2026Bad Bunny’s 2026 Super Bowl show didn’t just break viewing records—it confirmed that the “global sound” (Latin music, Afrobeats, Amapiano, Afro-fusion) is now the center of pop culture, not a side...