Plus this music rescued so many of us from the streets.”Si Se Tiran (feat. For Viva el Perreo, they recruited some crucial collaborators, including Bad Bunny and star producer DJ Orma, as well as DJ Blass and Don Omar, two pioneers they pay tribute to with the joyful sincerity of fandom. People have been waiting a long time for it.”Hoy Se ChichaJowell: “Hoy se chicha is Puerto Rican slang for ‘sex tonight.’ There’s a lot of dirty language in the lyrics, but it sends out a happy message.”Randy: “This is like lounge perreo, with a really soft, tasty vibe. We loved it the minute we heard it. Here we take Jowell & Randy’s style and we take the vocals to a new level. It sounds like a real serious reggaetón, but the story is like a scene out of some comedy. “The production of this album was somewhat atypical due to the pandemic,” Randy adds. Billboard is a subsidiary of Valence Media, LLC. Social media is definitely a factor in toxic behavior. “We enjoyed working with Don Omar the most,” Jowell continues. It’s DJ Blass for the future—dirty perreo, straight from the streets but classy.”Anaranjado (feat. It’s pure ’90s Puerto Rican reggaetón that we wanted to bring into 2020 with Urba & Rome, who are two of the dopest producers right now. Viva El Perreo is a follow up to La Alcaldía del Perreo: The Album, Jowell & Randy’s last entry on Top Latin Albums in 2016 which debuted and peaked at No. Miky Woodz)Jowell: “This is a classic-feeling reggaetón track on an album that is quite classic. TWITTER The whole record is designed so that one song blends into the next one, like a DJ set.”Reggaetón HP (feat. Sometime soon people will dance to it in the clubs and celebrate. It gives your ears a rest, and it’s something you can enjoy in a different way.”Apaga la LuzRandy: “Another perreo by Jowell & Randy. De La Ghetto)Randy: “Jowell & Randy and De La Ghetto have never failed on a reggaetón track. J Balvin)Jowell: “‘Anaranjado’ balances the album a little bit. Release Viva el Perreo. It’s heavy reggaetón for the dance floor, for people that like to let loose. It’s also about ourselves and everything we had to get over in this business, all the bad stuff people were saying about us because of how we dressed or the things we were doing. We sound fierce on it, rapping hard as if we were doing dembow, but the track itself is very mellow, as if we were on a Caribbean beach with some choice ladies. This actually started as a long song that we broke in two. ... Viva el Perreo Jowell & Randy, Miky Woodz, Don Omar, Barbie Rican Rimas Entertainment LLC. The process of recording our voices took place under strict security measures, quartering us for several weeks in a studio. The song starts by making you a cozy bed in the middle of all the perreo, with a little piano and a pretty melody. It marks the Puerto Rican act's return to the chart’s top 10 since 2013 when Sobredosis debuted and peaked at No. Editors’ Notes 1. DJ FERMIN produced it and Bad Bunny wrote the parts that Jowell sings. Viva El Perreo concurrently debuts at No. Once the voices were recorded, they were distributed via the internet to the producers who each took charge from their respective studios to finalize the mixes and give the last details to this musical project.”. It’s really funny. Cookie Settings People like Daddy Yankee or us came out with a sound that a lot of people thought was shit, but we kept going because we had so much faith. Viva El Perreo was released Aug. 8 via Rimas Entertainment and produced by DJ Orma, SubeloNeo, DJ Blass and Bad Bunny. E. 14 Tracks. All Rights Reserved. Release Date: 2020-08-08 Label: Rimas Entertainment LLC. When I think of a video, I imagine a very cold place, with icebergs and everything, and us singing in the snow.”Jowell: “Barbie Rican sings in the chorus. 23. “Most of the ideas were handled by Bad Bunny and we managed to exchange and approve our ideas from home using technology. “It’s not the new school, because there’a a generation after us, but it’s not the old school either, because we still give the likes of Vico C and Daddy Yankee the huge respect they deserve.” Read on as the duo elaborate on their particular journey back to the future, one song at a time.TóxicosRandy: “It’s about relationships today, but we wanted to give it a funny twist that would grab your attention. Pamela Bustios The beat is brutal, it appeals to what we call malianteo in Puerto Rico: street life. Jowell & Randy are back on the Top Latin Albums chart as Viva El Perreo, their fifth studio album, debuts at No. Big perreo. He has a very classic swing and a very classic way of doing reggaetón, but he sounds modern at the same time. It sounds like a track from the days of DJ Blass, and I like that. It's what we aspire to as artists every time we release new music. It’s true-blue reggaetón, and it’s always an honor to have De La Ghetto.”La GoldaJowell: “We grabbed part of ‘La Gorda Budusca,’ a Maicol & Manuel song that was on [1994’s cassette-only compilation] The Noise Underground Original, Vol.