Tag: mexico city

Kenia OS presenta su primer álbum “Cambios de Luna” con una experiencia única para sus fans en Spotify

Kenia OS, Kenia Guadalupe Flores Osuna, saltó a la fama haciendo vlogs, se convirtió en una creadora de contenido exitosa y ahora es una fuerza en la música pop en México.

En 2018 su sencillo debut “Por siempre” la convirtió en una artista emergente y en verano de 2020 fue artista RADAR México. Desde entonces, Kenia ha continuado una serie de lanzamientos de sencillos como “La Noche”, “Bonita” y más recientemente “Joder” junto a la rapera Snow Tha Product, duplicando el número de oyentes en la plataforma para alcanzar los 2.5 M oyentes mensuales y 1.5 M de seguidores 

Kenia se autodefine como una creyente en la astrología, bajo su signo Cáncer que es regido por la luna. Ahora las estrellas se alinean para el lanzamiento de su primer álbum “Cambios de Luna” y Spotify lo celebra creando una experiencia inmersiva y contenido exclusivo para que sus fans conozcan una nueva cara de la artista en su propia voz en album clips en Spotify. 

Los primeros en escuchar las nuevas canciones del álbum fueron algunos de sus fans más leales, conocidos como “keninis” quienes asistieron a una escucha privada en la Ciudad de México. De pronto se apagó la luz y Kenia sorprendió a sus fans ataviada en la capa que luce en la portada del álbum. La emoción estalló y le siguió una emotiva charla sobre cómo surgió este trabajo. 

“Cambios de Luna” tardó un año en ejecutarse porque Kenia OS realizó cada una de las canciones para contar lo que le pasaba en ese momento de la vida: crecimiento, sanación y amor propio. 

Tuve tantos cambios y transformaciones en el proceso de hacer el álbum que  por eso le puse Cambios de Luna”, dice Kenia en uno de los clips que los fans podrán descubrir solo en Spotify. 

“El álbum es muy personal. Tenía muchas emociones dentro de mí que necesitaba expresar de alguna manera. Hacer este álbum fue una experiencia que me ayudó a sanar y a crecer como artista. Lo inalcanzable se volvió alcanzable”, afirma.

Get to Know the Finalists for the 2020 Spotify Awards

The first ever Spotify Awards are just a few weeks away, and the countdown is on. The event, being held in Mexico City on March 5, is an award show based entirely on user-generated data from our listeners in Mexico.* So your plays, patterns, and habits not only count, but they’re going to determine the award categories, finalists, and winners.

The Spotify Awards are a true reflection of what you—the fans in Mexico—are listening to. So without further ado, meet the finalists for the 12 main Spotify Awards categories.

There will be 44 more categories in total shared on social media and the green carpet, in addition to the twelve above that will be broadcast. So tune into TNT if you are in Latin America or Telemundo and Universo if you are in the United States, visit the official site to learn more about the rest of the categories, and stream the artists from the Spotify Awards hub.

* Spotify Awards data from Mexican users with the exception of “Most streamed Mexican artist outside of Mexico”

Conoce a los finalistas de los Spotify Awards 2020

Los primeros Spotify Awards están a tan sólo unas semanas de llegar y la cuenta regresiva ya empezó, el evento se llevará a cabo en la Ciudad de México el próximo 5 de marzo. Estos premios están basados cien por ciento en la data de escucha de nuestros usuarios en México*. Así que tus plays, patrones y hábitos de escucha no solo cuentan, sino que van a determinar las categorías, finalistas y ganadores de los premios. 

Los Spotify Awards son el verdadero reflejo de lo que ustedes, fans en México, están escuchando. Así que, sin más preámbulo, conoce a los 12 finalistas de las categorías principales de los Spotify Awards. 

Habrá más de 44 categorías en total, las cuales serán entregadas en redes sociales y en la Alfombra Verde, 12 de estas se transmitirán en vivo. Así que sintoniza la señal de TNT si estás en Latinoamérica o Telemundo y Universo si estás en Estados Unidos, visita el sitio oficial para conocer con más detalle las categorías que se van a premiar, y escuchar a los artistas finalistas en el espacio dedicado a Spotify Awards

 

*La data para los Spotify Awards corresponde a usuarios mexicanos con excepción del “Artista de México más escuchado en el mundo”.

Save the Date for the First Ever Spotify Awards in Mexico City

This March, Spotify is changing the game with our first awards show—one based entirely on user-generated data. That’s right: your streaming choices—whether hip-hop or rock, reggaeton, banda, or cumbia—matter.

Your plays, patterns, and habits will help determine the award categories, finalists, and winners, for the Spotify Awards by providing a true reflection of what fans are listening to. You can get excited for an awards ceremony that actually speaks to what the people are streaming.

Through a partnership with Turner Latin America, the Spotify Awards will be broadcast live on March 5 from the streaming capital of the world, Mexico City. The Mexican capital has the most listeners on Spotify globally, ahead of even New York City, London, and Paris. 

Since Spotify’s launch in Mexico back in 2013, the country has evolved into one of the most sophisticated digital music markets, becoming a magnet for major live acts and inviting rising singers and songwriters to connect with fans and make their mark. And now, it’s the host for the first Spotify Awards, which will be broadcast live on TNT for all of Spanish speaking Latin America.

So save the date—and get streaming. You’ve got the power.

 

Reserva la fecha para los primeros Spotify Awards en la Ciudad de México

El próximo marzo, Spotify cambiará las reglas del juego con nuestra primera ceremonia de premios, totalmente basada en datos generados por usuarios. Así es: tus streams – ya sea hip-hop o rock, reggaeton, banda o cumbia – cuentan.

Tus plays, gustos y hábitos de escucha nos ayudarán a determinar las categorías de premios, los finalistas y los ganadores de los Spotify Awards, ofreciendo un reflejo fiel de lo que los fans están escuchando. Prepárate para emocionarte con una ceremonia de premios que realmente celebra lo que la gente escucha.

Por medio de una alianza con Turner Latinoamérica, el evento será transmitido en vivo el próximo 5 de marzo, directamente desde la capital mundial de streaming, Ciudad de México. La capital de México tiene la mayor cantidad de oyentes en Spotify a nivel global, sobrepasando a ciudades como Nueva York, Londres y París.

Desde el lanzamiento de Spotify en México en 2013, el país ha evolucionado hasta colocarse entre los mercados más sofisticados de música digital, convirtiéndose en un imán para los principales eventos en vivo e invitando tanto a artistas consagrados como emergentes a conectar con fans y dejar su huella en la capital del país. Y ahora, es el anfitrión del primer Spotify Awards, que será transmitido en vivo para todos los países de habla hispana de Latinoamérica. 

Así que reserva la fecha – y dale a play a tu música favorita. Tú tienes el poder.  

Behind the Scenes on Roma’s Double Soundtrack

If you were to create a movie based on your past, what music would you choose to accompany it? That’s the question Alfonso Cuarón faced with Roma, his recent Oscar-winning film that pays homage to his childhood in the titular upper-middle-class neighborhood in Mexico City.

The autobiographical film was more personal than any of Cuarón’s more recent big-budget Hollywood productions, like Gravity and Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. It primarily focuses on the relationship between Cuarón’s family and their nanny Cleo, played in the movie by Yalitza Aparicio, who cares for the household as the parents navigate a painful separation. “I wanted to open some family wounds,” he told Variety.

To solve the challenge of scoring his cinematic vision, Cuarón worked with music supervisor Lynn Fainchtein to create the perfect musical backdrop to his memory of Mexico City in the ’70s. Fainchtein, who spoke to us recently over the phone and grew up in the neighborhood of La Condesa, which is right next to Roma and similar in many ways, said of the experience: “[Alfonso and I] share the same memories, and we share the same TV shows, so it was something close to me. It was part of my memory as well.”

Unlike most movies, where the music that sets the mood often happens outside the film’s universe, in Roma the music is a part of what’s actually happening within the film. This means the whole soundtrack had to be true to the music people in Mexico in the ’70s had access to, what was popular at the time, and what would make sense for their characters to enjoy.

To create this level of detail, Fainchtein and Cuarón divided the film into scenes and created playlists for each one. The bulk of the movie’s action takes place around the family home—there are scenes of the parents and kids eating dinner or watching TV with Cleo; there’s even a sequence focused on the father trying to park his car in the garage. And so, each room was given its own distinct musical flavor. “We created playlists for the kitchen, for the playroom, for Cleo’s room…” said Fainchtein.

This specificity allowed the pair to create smaller universes within the film’s larger one, adding to Roma’s authenticity. In the kitchen, for example, while Cleo and another nanny prepare food and wash the dishes, Latin Grammy Award-winning pop and ranchera singer Rocío Dúrcal sings “Más Bonita Que Ninguna” in the background. Fainchtein admitted it’s not the music she would have listened to when she was ten years old, but she knows it’s similar to the music her nanny might have had on in the background. Elsewhere, the soundtrack features other Mexican pop anthems of the era, including Leo Dan’s “Te He Prometido” and Juan Gabriel’s “No Tengo Dinero”—songs that Fainchtein confirmed were on the radio in 1970 and 1971, the years when the movie takes place.

And while Fainchtein had a rich memorial archive to draw on, she also dove into the various music archives available in Mexico City, including those of Televisa and the Filmoteca at the National Autonomous University. She looked at old magazines that held television show listings and researched radio programs, advertisements, and even the DJs of the era. Each song was chosen “because Alfonso liked it and because it pertains to the memories, and to the period,” she said. Her goal was to evoke a vision as close to Cuarón’s recollection as possible.

To accompany the Roma soundtrack, Cuarón and Fainchtein also commissioned the album Music Inspired by the Film Roma. They compiled the album with Randall Poster, another storied music supervisor who is best known for his work on Boardwalk Empire and collaborations with Wes Anderson. Poster and Fainchtein approached artists “close to Alfonso’s heart,” Fainchtein said, and offered them free rein to create a song inspired by the music or the sounds from the film. The results capture a variety of elements and atmospheres. T Bone Burnett, for example, built the off-tune steam whistle of the camote (sweet potato) vendors and the shrill flute of the knife sharpeners offering their services on the city’s streets—captured vividly in the movie—into the rhythmicRoma.” Laura Marling, on the other hand, created a choir-backed, lush and folksy cover of The Ray Conniff Singers’ Those Were the Days,” one of the songs Fainchtein included in the film.

Since the film was announced at the end of 2016, Fainchtein and Cuarón have worked very closely to evoke the world of Roma. When asked what it was like to be tasked with the music for such an intensely personal project, Fainchtein said she relished the opportunity. “It was like a chance to put a soundtrack to my family’s story.” And despite having over 100 film and TV credits to her name—she is credited on all of Alejandro González Iñárritu’s films, including Birdman and The Revenant—Fainchtein described working on Roma as one of the most unique experiences of her career and likened the process of building out the movie’s world to the construction of a building. “Luckily,” she said, “I didn’t have to build the building; I only put in the lights on each of the rooms and the floors.”

Relive the movie with Roma (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) or hear the songs it inspired on the album Music Inspired by the Film Roma.

Mexico City Is Now the World’s Music-Streaming Mecca

Chilangos (people who live in Mexico City) have an insatiable appetite for things that taste, look and sound cool from around the globe—and music is certainly no exception. In fact, Mexico City has the most listeners on Spotify globally, ahead of Santiago, Chile, and New York City.

You might think New York City, London, and Paris are the cities setting style, culture, and music trends, but Mexico City is right there with them at the top of the pack. A multicultural mecca of nearly 22 million residents, the greater Mexico City metropolitan area is more populous than both the greater Los Angeles and greater New York City areas, respectively. And, it’s now a top-streaming destination for musicians like Adele, Diplo, Metallica, Harry Styles, Radiohead, New Order, Bruno Mars, Madonna, the late Michael Jackson, and many more.

As a result, artists from all over the world are hitting home with audiences there. Let’s dig into our streaming data numbers for a closer look at Mexico City’s impressive streaming stronghold—and the music makers benefiting from it.

From first to fastest-growing

Mexico City has evolved in a few short years from being Spotify’s first-ever Latin American market, in 2013, to our largest listener base worldwide today. Since we launched in Mexico City, Spotify has opened international artists’ eyes to this global music epicenter as a place to expand their reach and connect with new audiences.

The city’s increasing gravitational pull for artists is particularly evident ahead of the annual Corona Capital music festival on November 17 and 18. According to our data, Mexico City is the No. 1 city in the world for the festival’s headliners. Among them are Imagine Dragons (995,940 monthly listeners), Robbie Williams (322,851 monthly listeners), The Chemical Brothers (117,190 monthly listeners), and Nine Inch Nails (75,142 monthly listeners).

Drawn in by the power of streaming

Lured by the popularity of streaming in the city, aspiring and rising singers and songwriters are in on the trend, too. We’re seeing a wave of touring artists, like genre-bending singer-songwriter Mon Laferte from Chile and alt rock band Diamante Eléctrico from Colombia, flock to Mexico City to connect with fans and make their mark.

As Mexico City’s growing streaming numbers surface through Spotify data, the city is becoming a magnet for major live acts. Take seasoned alt rockers the Pixies, for example. The iconic Boston band’s streams spiked 346 percent in Mexico just one week before a series of performances in Mexico City. With 145,995 monthly Spotify listeners, Mexico City may hold their biggest fan base. Flush with numbers like that, it’s no wonder the Frank Black-led group played last weekend to a crowd of 100,000 in Zócalo, central Mexico City’s main square.

Gorillaz, a popular virtual hip-hop act, is also riding Mexico City’s streaming dominance. The quirky fictional character-based group has 434,023 monthly Spotify listeners in Mexico City. Not surprisingly, they played the final shows of their last tour there. But the Mexico City magic applies to indie artists, too. Hippo Campus, a Minnesota-based band, discovered in 2017 that Mexico City was their top city for Spotify plays as well. This led the group to play there live for the first time in May 2018. Fueled by Mexico City’s music magic, their popularity continues to soar in the area—and beyond—with 1.6 million monthly listeners on Spotify to date.

Rock on, Mexico City

Alt rock is a hit in Mexico City, but so is guitar-driven classic rock. A large cluster of the genre’s most loyal fans can’t seem to get enough of classic rock’s biggest bands, including the Beatles (506,714 monthly listeners). And in no other city is the revival of Queen so evident. On the heels of the recent theatrical release of the Freddie Mercury biopic “Bohemian Rhapsody,” streaming activity for Queen in Mexico City rocketed past a million (1,278,133) monthly listeners in all.

The city has evolved into one of the most sophisticated digital music markets in the last five years—and we don’t see its music magnet slowing down anytime soon.