The Puerto Rican artist Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio (Bayamón, 1994), known artistically as Bad Bunny, celebrated last Monday night the last of the ten concerts he offered in Madrid. In total, more than 600,000 tickets sold to see him at the Metropolitano stadium.
On most of the dates in Spain (the ten in Madrid and two in Barcelona), Bad Bunny has offered an unreleased song per day and a surprise performance. To culminate his stay in Spain, this June 15th he was joined on stage by the Canarian artist Quevedo, who announced his tour of Spain this weekend.
Upon climbing onto the roof of La Casita, the second stage of the event inspired by a real house in Puerto Rico where the artist performs reggaeton songs, the singer from Gran Canaria, who performs urban music, appeared, performing a song produced in Lanzarote with the Puerto Rican.
Quevedo began by singing Columbia (2023), a hit released three summers ago and which already sparked Bad Bunny's interest at the time. The song, which made it onto the charts of the most listened-to songs in Spain, was created and produced in Lanzarote.
Without a large recording studio, in a house in Lanzarote, with a mattress to isolate the sound and with part of the team that accompanied him in the creation of his first album Donde Quiero Estar, Quevedo created Columbia. The artist then shared the recording process from the island of volcanoes on social media.
After performing Columbia, Quevedo also performed three other hits, Wanda (2023), Scandic (2026), and the Bizarrap Music Session Vol. 52 (2022), popularly known as Quédate, which catapulted him to international fame.
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