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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.
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.
Typical traits you’ll hear:
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:
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.