For decades, the American music industry operated under a largely unquestioned assumption: global superstardom required English. Then came Bad Bunny, an artist who solely performs in Spanish yet dominates global charts (and award shows, with his latest win: Album of the Year at the Grammys, a historic first for the Recording Academy), all while selling out stadiums across continents, including a 31-show residency on the island, and inspiring millions of fans who don’t speak Spanish to shout every lyric anyway.

What explains this cultural shift? We spoke with six non-Spanish-speaking fans across the United States and revealed a shared answer: rhythm before translation, emotion before vocabulary, and recognizing music over everything.

β€œMusic is a universal language because you don’t have to understand the words to know that the rhythm and sound of the instruments gives you a warm feeling and makes you want to move around,” Devon Ashby says. Photo: Devon Ashby

Advertisement

For Devon Ashby, a 29-year-old based in Washington, D.C., the introduction came in 2017 while studying abroad in the Dominican Republic, when he first heard β€œSoy Peor” on the radio.

β€œI’d never really been out of the country before that,” Ashby recalls.

πŸ“°

Continue Reading on HuffPost

This preview shows approximately 15% of the article. Read the full story on the publisher's website to support quality journalism.

Read Full Article β†’