Don Omar Ft.lucenzo - Danza Kuduro < 4K • 8K >

Global Reggaeton and Luso-African Rhythms: A Case Study of Don Omar ft. Lucenzo’s “Danza Kuduro” (2010)

(Note: The above is a condensed version of a full 8–10 page paper. For publication, one would expand the musicological transcription, include a formal rhythmic notation, and add interview data with the artists.) Don Omar ft.Lucenzo - Danza Kuduro

[Generated AI] Course: Popular Music and Global Culture Date: April 18, 2026 Abstract Released in 2010, “Danza Kuduro” by Don Omar featuring Lucenzo became a pan-Atlantic summer anthem, blending Puerto Rican reggaeton with the Portuguese-language kuduro genre from Angola via Portugal. This paper analyzes the song’s musical hybridity, its lyrical function as a dance imperative, its role within the Fast Five (2011) film soundtrack, and its enduring legacy as a global party staple. The study argues that “Danza Kuduro” succeeds because it negotiates multiple cultural identities—Latin, Lusophone, and Anglo—without erasing their distinct rhythmic signatures, creating a template for 21st-century crossover hits. 1. Introduction In the summer of 2010, a song featuring a Spanish-language verse, a Portuguese-language chorus, and a synthesized accordion riff topped charts across Europe and Latin America, later gaining platinum status in the United States. “Danza Kuduro”—a title that fuses Spanish danza (dance) with the Angolan-Portuguese term kuduro (literally “hard ass,” referring to a percussive dance style)—represents a landmark collaboration between Puerto Rican reggaeton icon Don Omar and French-Portuguese singer Lucenzo (born Philippe Oliveira). Unlike typical Latin pop crossovers that prioritize English-language accessibility, “Danza Kuduro” remains proudly bilingual, using rhythm as the primary universal language. 2. Historical and Genre Context 2.1 Kuduro’s Origins Kuduro emerged in Luanda, Angola, in the late 1980s, fusing traditional semba with electronic beats from house and techno, accelerated to 130–140 BPM. Lucenzo, born to Portuguese parents in France, popularized kuduro in Europe with his 2008 hit “Vem Dançar Kuduro” (featuring Big Ali), which itself sampled the foundational beat of “Danza Kuduro.” Global Reggaeton and Luso-African Rhythms: A Case Study

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