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Is Contemporary Christian Music, CCM, Just Secular in Disguise?

August 7, 2025

A June 13, 2025, Baptist News Global article highlights the long-standing conflicts between traditional Black gospel music and contemporary Christian music (CCM), which are exacerbated by racial...

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What Really Led to Zak Starkey’s Confusing ‘Firing’ from The Who

August 7, 2025

In April 2025, The Who unexpectedly fired long‑time drummer Zak Starkey during a Royal Albert Hall show, reportedly over performance issues. Starkey, son of Beatles legend Ringo Starr, had been...

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MTV VMAs snubs and shocks: See who was left out of nominations

August 7, 2025

The 2025 MTV Video Music Award nominations have been announced, boasting a diverse lineup with 33 first-time nominees. Pop icons Taylor Swift and Beyoncé even earned artist of the year nods without...

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Can a Christian Rapper Go Viral Without Compromise? DC3 Just Did

August 7, 2025

From church pews in Northampton to crowds in Zimbabwe, DC3 is more than just a popular TikTok artist; he is a devout musician who is setting a new standard for UK rap. Through ingenious videos...

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KATSEYE Makes History at Lollapalooza 2025 With Record-Breaking Festival Debut

August 7, 2025

Under the blazing Chicago sun, HYBE’s rising stars KATSEYE and BOYNEXTDOOR didn’t just perform at Lollapalooza—they owned it. From viral on-stage chemistry to career-defining sets, the two groups...

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Lil Yachty Labels Drake The "Biggest Rapper Of All Time"

August 7, 2025

Lil Yachty isn’t shy about showing love for his close friend Drake. During a recent appearance on the MdFoodieBoyz podcast, the Some Sexy Songs 4 U artist labeled the Toronto superstar...

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Ed Sheeran Reunites with Lookalike Rupert Grint for New Music Video After ‘Lego House’ 13 Years Ago

August 5, 2025

Ed Sheeran has brought back actor Rupert Grint for an upcoming music video, marking their first collaboration since 2011's viral "Lego House" visual. The new project accompanies Sheeran's track...

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Spotify Launches "DJ Now Accepts Requests" — A Revolution in Fan-Driven Exploration

August 5, 2025

To improve real-time song discovery, Spotify is now testing a new feature dubbed "DJ Now Takes Requests." The feature adds a layer of crowd participation to streaming experiences by allowing users...

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Roger Daltrey hits out at axed The Who drummer Zak Starkey for ‘incredibly upsetting’ remarks after fallout

August 5, 2025

The Who frontman Roger Daltrey has spoken out about his fallout with drummer Zak Starkey, calling the musician’s post-departure comments “incredibly upsetting.” Starkey, son of Beatles legend Ringo...

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Love Like This: Fujii Kaze’s Daydream of Devotion, in Full Technicolor

August 5, 2025

Fujii Kaze’s “Love Like This” isn’t your average love song, it’s a shimmering, soulful glide through the kind of romance that doesn’t just sweep you off your feet, it levitates you. With effortless...

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Lover Girl: Laufey’s Timeless Love Letter to the Hopeless Romantic in All of Us

August 5, 2025

Laufey’s “Lover Girl” isn’t just a song, it’s a soft, sweeping confession wrapped in strings, jazz chords, and the kind of vulnerability that makes you want to cry into your oat milk latte. With...

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Saweetie and Boffum: A Viral Remix of Sass, Style, and Side-Eyes

August 5, 2025

When Saweetie hit the mic with her usual sparkle and sass, fans expected bops, but what they didn’t expect was boffum. Yes, boffum. The internet has been shaken, stirred, and straight-up meme-ified...

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Crafting the Bounce in Modern LatinPop Using Bad Bunny

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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.​​

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...