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Omerta Music Group
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Latin Pop
Latin pop is mainstream pop music performed primarily in Spanish (and sometimes Portuguese) that blends contemporary pop songwriting with Latin American and Iberian rhythms, harmonies, and vocal stylings. It typically features verse–pre-chorus–chorus forms, catchy hooks, polished production, and a balance between rhythmic drive and romantic lyric themes. Classic Latin pop often leans on bolero- and ballad-informed melodies and soft-rock textures, while modern Latin pop readily incorporates dance-pop, electronic, and urbano elements (such as reggaeton-influenced grooves) without losing its sing-along pop core.
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Merengue
Merengue is a fast, dance-centered popular music from the Dominican Republic characterized by a driving 2/4 meter, bright major-key harmonies, and a propulsive rhythmic engine created by güira and tambora. In its rural "típico" form, the lead instrument is a diatonic accordion, supported by tambora, güira, and bass. Urban and orchestral evolutions expanded the instrumentation to include saxophones, trumpets, trombones, piano, congas, and electric bass, yielding a powerful big-band sound. Common song forms use verse–chorus structures with catchy coros and a climactic jaleo section where horns or accordion play tightly arranged riffs. The style spans energetic party anthems, romantic ballad-leaning numbers (merengue romántico), and modern fusions that blend with pop and urban music.
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Reggaeton
Reggaeton is a contemporary urban dance music that blends the dembow rhythm of Jamaican dancehall with hip hop’s MC culture and Caribbean–Latin melodic sensibilities. Its hallmark is the propulsive, syncopated “dembow” drum pattern, typically around 85–100 BPM (often felt in half-time), which powers energetic verses and catchy, sung hooks. Lyrically, reggaeton is most often in Spanish or Spanglish and centers on dance, nightlife, flirtation, romance, and street life, with a performance style that alternates between rapped bars and melodic chorus lines. Production emphasizes tight, punchy drums, rolling 808 sub-bass, percussive plucks or stabs, and bright, hook-forward toplines—crafted for the club and tailored for crowd participation and perreo.
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Tecnomerengue
Tecnomerengue is a dance-oriented Latin genre that modernizes merengue through the use of electronic production, synthesizers, drum machines, sequenced bass lines, and polished studio arrangements. It fuses the basic rhythmic identity of Dominican merengue with strong pop and tropical-commercial production values, and it often shows influences from cumbia and lambada. In many recordings, live instrumentation is reduced mainly to percussion and brass, while keyboards and programmed elements carry much of the harmonic and melodic texture. The style is typically fast, festive, and highly accessible, designed for clubs, parties, radio, and mass popular appeal. Compared with more traditional merengue conjunto formats, tecnomerengue tends to sound brighter, more synthetic, more arranged, and more strongly shaped by late-1980s and 1990s dance-pop aesthetics.
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Artists
Ñejo
Reykon
Rosario, Toño
Magic Juan
Pasabordo
Machore, Martin
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
, which inspired us to help curious minds keep digging into music's ever-evolving genres.