Dangerous (Yandel album)

Dangerous
Studio album by Yandel
Released November 6, 2015 (2015-11-06)
Recorded 2014–15
Studio Earcandy Studio (Orlando, U.S.)
Studio DMI (Las Vegas, U.S.)
Genre
Length 58:41
Label Sony Music
Producer
Yandel chronology
Legacy: De Líder a Leyenda Tour
(2015)
Dangerous
(2015)
Singles from Dangerous
  1. "Encantadora"
    Released: October 2, 2015
  2. "Nunca Me Olvides"
    Released: July 12, 2016
  3. "Loba"
    Released: October 7, 2016
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Dangerous is the third studio album (sixth overall) by Puerto Rican reggaeton and pop artist Yandel, of the duo Wisin & Yandel, released worldwide on November 6, 2015 through Sony Music Latin.[2] Contrary of his previous studio album, De Líder A Leyenda, Dangerous focuses mainly on reggaeton music, with some synthpop and electropop exceptions. It features reggaeton artists including Nicky Jam, Tego Calderón, Gadiel and De La Ghetto, as well as artists from other genres like Lil Jon, Pitbull, French Montana, Future, Shaggy and Alex Sensation.[2] As of March 2016, the album includes only one single: «Encantadora», released on October, as well as a promotional electropop song titled «Somos Uno», released on September 18, 2015. It reached the top position on Billboard's Top Latin Albums chart, surpassing 5,000 copies sold as of November 12, 2015.[3] The album also reached the 10th position on Billboard 's Best Latin Albums of 2015 ranking, being one of the two reggaeton albums that were chosen by the magazine's editors, the other one being The Last Don 2 by Don Omar, who reached the 9th position.[4] Dangerous received a latin platinum certification in October 2016 by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for surpassing 60,000 copies sold in the United States. Its lead single, «Encantadora», was certified with 2× Platinum in Spain by the PROMUSICAE and later with 5× Platinum (Latin) by the RIAA. Dangerous won a Latin American Music Award for Album of the Year on October 6, 2016.[5]

Background

After Wisin & Yandel's hiatus in the mid 2013, both artists had a great success with their respective studio albums, Wisin with El Regreso del Sobreviviente and Yandel with his Latin Grammy Award nominee gold record De Líder a Leyenda, as well as their hit singles as soloists. Yandel released two albums more before Dangerous: an EP and a live album both recorded at mid 2014 and titled Legacy: De Líder a Leyenda Tour, reaching the top position on Billboard 's Latin Rhythm Albums. On the other hand, Wisin focused entirely on his next studio album, Los Vaqueros: La Trilogía, which was later published on September 2015.

In that year, before Dangerous' release, Yandel was nominated for four Lo Nuestro Award and a Latin American Music Award, with no wins, as well as two nominations at the Latin Grammy Awards in November, two weeks after his album's release. Dangerous was the last album in which the rapper Christian Ramos, most known as Syko, worked as lyricist, as he died in his sleep in Orlando on December 27, 2015.[6] Syko had co-written also in Yandel's previous two albums in the songs «La Cama» and «Jaque Mate».

The catchphrase "Dangerous" was first used in Yandel's 2011 song «Tumbao» featuring De La Ghetto (written by them and Tainy), from the duo's deluxe edition of the album Los Vaqueros: El Regreso, and wasn't used again until his 2014 EP Legacy: De Líder a Leyenda Tour.

On March 2016, Yandel became the first Puerto Rican artist to sign to Roc Nation, an American entertainment company founded by the rapper Jay Z in 2008.[7] This will probably led to a collaboration wished by him with the singer Rihanna, who is also signed to the label.[8]

Production and release

Dangerous was recorded between 2014 and 2015 at Earcandy Studios in Orlando, with Lil Jon's vocals on «Calentura Trap Edition» being recorded at Studio DMI in Las Vegas. 16 songs were chosen out of 30 recorded for the album.[9] The song «Calentura» was released on March 16, 2016 as the album's lead single, reaching the top position on Billboard's Latin Rhythm Airplay chart in August.[10] On May was released a remix version featuring Puerto Rican rapper Tempo and on September was released a trap version featuring US rapper Lil Jon, which replaced the original «Calentura» in the album's track list. The electropop «Somos Uno» was released on September and on October was released «Encantadora» as the lead single. Dangerous was finally published on November 6 trough Sony Music Latin, reaching the top position on Billboard's Top Latin Albums chart after a week of its release.[3] After the album's success, Yandel was ranked 28th on Billboard's Year-End Top Latin Artists chart.[11]

Yandel working on the album at Criteria Studios in Miami. December 2014.

There are two songs that were originally released with Yandel as a featured artist. «Báilame» was released on July 31, 2015 as an Alex Sensation's single from an upcoming album, and its music video was published on his VEVO channel on October 22. The music was taken from Oniel Anubis' 2014 namesake single, while the chorus was taken from that song and Latin Fresh's 1997 single «Ella Se Arrebata». «Yo Soy Del Barrio» was first shown on August 2015 on the radio show El Coyote The Show (part of La Nueva 94.7 FM radio station) as a purely promotional song for Tego Calderon's concert in the José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum. Its jingle version is different from the Dangerous one because Tego changed his lyrics.

Yandel's voice was recorded using two Neve 1073 preamplifiers, a Vocoder Korg voice codec, a Solid-State Channel Strip preamplifier, The Mouth software by Native Instruments and Melodyne software. As well as on his previous studio album, his voice was multitracked on all songs and also has some delays.

The entire album was co-written by Yandel with additional lyrics by the song's producer and/or other lyricists. Dangerous hasn't a lead producer but it has work from various, such as Tainy (who produced 4 songs), Jumbo and Luny Tunes (who produced 2) and the rest (Onell Flow, Motiff, Saga Whiteblack, Haze, DJ Luian, Alex Killer, Nesty, Alex Sensation, Ray Casillas, The Mekanics, Nely and Predikador) who produced only one. Roberto Vazquez, most known as Earcandy, recorded and mixed almost the entire album, being «Riversa» (recorded by Luny Tunes and Predikador, mixed by them and Menes from the production duo Los De La Nazza) the only exception. The album was mastered by the producer Mike Fuller, who also mastered other reggaeton artists' albums including The Last Don 2 by Don Omar, Visionary by Farruko, La Melodía De La Calle: 3rd Season by Tony Dize and La Familia B Sides by J Balvin. Fuller also mastered albums from famous singers including Ricardo Montaner, Ricky Martin, David Bisbal, Chayanne, Roberto Carlos, Vico C and the duo Pimpinela.[12] As to musical instruments, the album has the electronic keyboard and synthesizers as the lead ones, with exceptions including an acoustic guitar in «No Sales De Mi Mente», «Encantadora», «Imaginar» and «Yo Soy Del Barrio», as well as a trombone in «Fantasía» and an electric guitar in «Yo Soy Del Barrio». The album focuses mainly on reggaeton music (mixing it with reggae fusion in «Encantadora»), with electropop, latin pop and hip hop exceptions, and includes more collaborations than his previous studio album, De Líder A Leyenda, which has four out of 17 songs (representing the 23% of the album), while Dangerous has nine out of 16 (representing the 56%).

Singles

Other releases

Dangerous Tour

Dangerous Tour is the second concert tour by Yandel, being De Líder a Leyenda VIP Tour his first one, which was from June to November 2014. After some months promoting his album and his future tour through other concerts around the Americas, Dangerous Tour started on October 7, 2016 in Puerto Rico, and will end on November 6, 2016 in Orlando, United States.[22]

Date City Country Place
October 7, 2016 Hato Rey, San Juan Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum
October 9, 2016 Chicago, Illinois United States Aragon Ballroom
October 12, 2016 Los Angeles, California Hollywood Palladium
October 13, 2016 San Jose, California City National Civic
October 16, 2016 Las Vegas, Nevada The AXIS
October 18, 2016 Phoenix, Arizona Comerica Theatre
October 19, 2016 El Paso, Texas El Paso County Coliseum
October 21, 2016 Houston, Texas Revention Music Center
October 23, 2016 Dallas, Texas South Side Ballroom
October 26, 2016 Indianapolis, Indiana Egyptian Room at Old National Center
October 28, 2016 Washington D.C. DAR Constitution Hall
October 29, 2016 Boston, Massachusetts Orpheum Theatre
November 1, 2016 New York City, New York Hammerstein Ballroom
November 4, 2016 Allentown, Pennsylvania PPL Center
November 5, 2016 Miami, Florida American Airlines Arena
November 6, 2016 Orlando, Florida House of Blues

Track listing

No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
1. "Calentura Trap Edition" (featuring Lil Jon)
  • Llandel Veguilla
  • Jonathan Smith
  • Gabriel Labrón
  • Alberto Duprey
  • Egbert Rosa
Onell Flow 3:39
2. "Nunca Me Olvides"  
  • L. Veguilla
  • Victor Viera
Jumbo 4:01
3. "Loba"  
  • L. Veguilla
  • Marcos Masis
  • Justin Quiles
Tainy 3:34
4. "Fantasía"  
  • L. Veguilla
  • José Torres
  • Juan Santana
  • Oscar Hernandez
  • Motiff
  • Santana (co.)
4:29
5. "No Sales De Mi Mente" (featuring Nicky Jam)
  • L. Veguilla
  • Nick Rivera
  • Christian Mena
Saga WhiteBlack 3:24
6. "Asesina" (featuring Pitbull)
  • L. Veguilla
  • Armando Perez
  • M. Masis
  • Jesús Nieves
Tainy 3:53
7. "Encantadora"  
Haze 4:00
8. "Déjame Explorar" (featuring French Montana)
  • L. Veguilla
  • Karim Kharbouch
  • DJ Luian
  • Alex Killer
4:04
9. "Imaginar"  
  • L. Veguilla
  • V. Viera
Jumbo 4:01
10. "Somos Uno"  
Nesty 3:00
11. "Báilame" (featuring Shaggy and Alex Sensation)
  • L. Veguilla
  • Javier Salazar
  • Orville Burrel
  • Oniel Rosario
  • Roberto Reyes
Alex Sensation 3:54
12. "Bella, Bella"  
  • L. Veguilla
  • E. Vargas
  • M. Masis
Tainy 3:02
13. "Yo Soy Del Barrio" (featuring Tego Calderón)
  • L. Veguilla
  • Tegui Calderón
  • C. Ramos
  • Alfonso Ordonez
  • Ramón Casillas
  • Serkan Yeter
  • Ray Casillas
  • DJ Seezy (co.)
2:59
14. "Mi Combo" (featuring Future)
  • L. Veguilla
  • Natvadius Wilburn
  • Michael Hernandez
  • Carlos Suarez
3:31
15. "Tu Cura" (featuring Gadiel)
  • L. Veguilla
  • Gadiel Veguilla
  • William Ríos
Luny Tunes 3:49
16. "Riversa" (featuring De La Ghetto)
  • L. Veguilla
  • Rafael Castillo
  • Victor Delgado
  • Francisco Saldaña
  • Victor Cabrera
3:21
Total length:
58:41

Credits and personnel

Most credits adapted from Allmusic and the CD information.[23] The list's order is based on the track list.

Artists and production

  • Llandel Veguilla: Lead vocals (all), background vocals (2, 3, 5, 6, 9–12, 14–16), multitracked vocals (all) and lyrics (all).
  • Roberto Vazquez: Mixing (all but 16), recording engineer (all but 16) and lyrics (10).
  • Mike Fuller: Mastering.
  • Jonathan Smith: Lead vocals and lyrics on «Calentura Trap Edition».
  • Egbert Rosa: Lyrics (1, 7) and producer (7).[lower-alpha 1]
  • Gabriel Lebrón: Lyrics on «Calentura Trap Edition».[lower-alpha 2]
  • Alberto Duprey: Lyrics on «Calentura Trap Edition».[lower-alpha 3]
  • Nelson Díaz: Producer on «Calentura Trap Edition».
  • Nik Hotchkiss: Recording engineer on «Calentura Trap Edition».
  • Jacob Mork: Assistant engineer on «Calentura Trap Edition».
  • Martin Nieves: Assistant engineer (2–15).
  • Victor Viera: Lyrics and producer (2, 9).
  • Justin Quiles: Lyrics on «Loba».
  • Marcos Masis: Lyrics (3, 6, 12) and producer (3, 6, 12, 14).
  • José Torres: Lyrics on «Fantasía».
  • Oscar Hernandez: Lyrics on «Fantasía».
  • Arbise "Motiff" Gonzalez: Percussion, acoustic guitar, audio programming, engineering and producer on «Fantasía».
  • Juan Santana: Co-producer on «Fantasía».
  • Efrain Gonzalez: Engineering on «Fantasía».
  • Alfonso Ordonez: Engineering (4), lyrics and audio programming (13).
  • William Paredes: Trombone on «Fantasía».
  • Nick Rivera: Lead vocals, background vocals and lyrics on «No Sales De Mi Mente».
  • Christian Mena: Lyrics and producer on «No Sales De Mi Mente».
  • Armando Perez: Lead vocals and lyrics on «Asesina».
  • Jesús Nieves: Lyrics on «Asesina».
  • Carlos Reyes: Lyrics on «Encantadora».

  • Eduardo Vargas: Lyrics on «Encantadora».
  • William Colon: Acoustic guitar on «Encantadora».
  • Karim Kharbouch: Lead vocals and lyrics on «Déjame Explorar».
  • Luian Malave: Producer on «Déjame Explorar».
  • Joseph Negron: Producer on «Déjame Explorar».
  • Christian Ramos: Lyrics (10, 13).
  • Ernesto Padilla: Lyrics and producer on «Somos Uno».
  • Orville Burrel: Lead vocals and lyrics on «Báilame».
  • Javier Salazar: Lead vocals, lyrics and producer on «Báilame».
  • Oniel Rosario: Lyrics on «Báilame».[lower-alpha 4]
  • Roberto Reyes: Lyrics on «Báilame».[lower-alpha 5]
  • Tegui Calderón: Lead vocals and lyrics on «Yo Soy Del Barrio».
  • Ramón Casillas: Lyrics and producer on «Yo Soy Del Barrio».
  • Nayvadius Wilburn: Lead vocals, background vocals and lyrics on «Mi Combo».
  • Carlos Suarez: Lyrics on «Mi Combo».
  • Michael Hernandez: Lyrics and producer on «Mi Combo».
  • Rico Evans: Producer on «Mi Combo».
  • Josias de la Cruz: Producer on «Mi Combo».
  • Gadiel Veguilla: Lead vocals and lyrics on «Tu Cura».
  • William Ríos: Lyrics on «Tu Cura».
  • Francisco Saldaña: Producer (15, 16), lyrics, recording engineer and mixing (16).
  • Victor Cabrera: Producer (15, 16), lyrics and recording engineer (16).
  • Rafael Castillo: Lead vocals and lyrics on «Riversa».
  • Victor Delgado: Lyrics and producer on «Riversa».
  • Eduardo Lopez: Mixing on «Riversa».

Sony Music Entertainment
  • Soraya Ramirez: Label manager.
  • Andres Wolff: Label manager.
  • Carlos Perez: Creative director.
  • Jorge Sanchez: Marketing director.
  • Alejandro Reglero: A&R.
  • Mateo García: Photography.
  • Ed Coriano: Fashion Stylist.

Y Entertainment
  • Llandel Veguilla: Executive producer.
  • Andres Martinez: Management.
  • Juan Toro: Booking.
  • Blanca Lasalle: Public relations.
  • Moises Cortes: A&R.

Chart performance

Album
Chart (2015) Position
U.S. Billboard 200[26] 101
U.S. Billboard Latin Rhythm Albums[27] 1
U.S. Billboard Top Album Sales[28] 65
U.S. Billboard Top Latin Albums[29] 1
Chart (2016) Position
U.S. Billboard Latin Rhythm Albums[30] 1
U.S. Billboard Top Latin Albums[31] 6
Songs
Song Peak chart positions Certifications
US SPA
Hot Latin Songs Latin Airplay Latin Digital Songs Latin Pop Songs Tropical Songs Latin Streaming Songs
«Somos Uno» 49
«Encantadora» 3 1 7 2 7 11 24
«No Sales De Mi Mente» 25 61
«Nunca Me Olvides» 15 6 41 11 57
  • PROMUSICAE: Gold[33]
«Mi Combo» 19

Sales and certifications

According to Nielsen SoundScan, Dangerous sold 5,000 copies in the United States during its first week of release, a thousand less sales than his previous studio album, De Líder a Leyenda,[3] which later received a latin gold certification by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for surpassing 30,000 copies sold in the US. Dangerous remained one week on the top position of Billboard's Top Latin Albums chart, in which it appeared 17 non-consecutive weeks from November 2015 to March 2016.[29] In October 2016, Yandel was surprised by Puerto Rican boxer José Cotto, who gave him two RIAA certifications: Platinum (Latin) for Dangerous (60.000 copies sold) and 5× Platinum (Latin) for his single "Encantadora" (300.000 copies sold),[5][32] which was also certified with 2× Platinum in Spain a few months before.[15]

Region Certification Certified units/Sales
United States (RIAA)[34] Platinum (Latin) 60,000double-dagger

^shipments figures based on certification alone

Accolades

In 2016, Yandel won a Tecla Award[35] and was nominated for a Billboard Latin Music Award.[36] On June 16, he confirmed that the Latin Songwriters Hall of Fame is going to give him the Hero's Special Award during La Musa Awards. Desmond Child and Rudy Pérez, founders of the hall of fame, praised him for his achievements, saying that he created his own musical style and continues to inspire millions of listeners around the world, being a hero for Latin Americans everywhere.[37]

Date Recipient Award Result
2015 Dangerous Best Latin Albums of 2015 according to Billboard #10
2016 Latin American Music Award for Album of the Year Won
Latin American Music Award for Urban Album of the Year Nominated
«Encantadora» Latin American Music Award for Song of the Year Nominated
Latin American Music Award for Favorite Urban Song Nominated
Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Song Won
Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Fusion/Performance Won

Notes

  1. Egbert Rosa, most known as Haze, was also the producer of the original «Calentura».
  2. Gabriel Lebrón, member of the production duo Los Harmónicos, was also the producer of the original «Calentura».
  3. Alberto Duprey, member of the production duo Los Harmónicos, was also the producer of the original «Calentura».
  4. Part of the chorus on «Báilame» was taken from Oniel Anubis' namesake 2014 single.[24]
  5. Roberto Reyes, most known as Latin Fresh, isn't officially credited as lyricist in «Báilame». A verse in the song was taken from the chorus of his 1997 single «Ella Se Arrebata».[25]

References

  1. Jeffries, David. "Review: Dangerous". Allmusic. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  2. 1 2 "Yandel: Dangerous". HBDirect. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 Mendizabal, Amaya (November 19, 2015). "Yandel Debuts at No. 1 on Top Latin Albums". Billboard. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  4. "Billboard.com's 10 Best Latin Albums of 2015: Critics' Picks". Billboard. December 23, 2015. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  5. 1 2 "Yandel Wins Latin American Music Award For Album Of The Year With "Dangerous" RIAA Certifies Platino Status For Dangerous Album And Encantadora Earns 5x Multi-Platino Certification". PR Newswire. October 7, 2016. Retrieved October 7, 2016.
  6. Cobo, Leila (January 1, 2016). "Syko 'El Terror,' Reggaeton Songwriter & Artist, Dies at 33". Billboard. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  7. Centeno, Tony (March 11, 2016). "Yandel Becomes The First Puerto Rican Rapper To Sign To Roc Nation". Vibe. Retrieved March 21, 2016.
  8. "Yandel - :60 with". YouTube. February 17, 2016. Retrieved March 21, 2016.
  9. Centeno, Tony (October 17, 2015). "Yandel Readies The World For A 'Dangerous' Album". Vibe. Retrieved March 21, 2016.
  10. "Latin Rhythm Airplay: Week of August 15, 2015". Billboard. August 15, 2015. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  11. "Top Latin Artists - Year End 2015". Billboard. Retrieved March 26, 2016.
  12. "Mike Fuller - Credits". Allmusic. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  13. Mendizabal, Amaya (January 21, 2016). "Yandel Earns Fifth No. 1 on Latin Airplay Chart With 'Encantadora'". Billboard. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  14. "Yandel - Encantadora (Official Video)". YouTube. November 30, 2015. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  15. 1 2 3 "Yandel - Encantadora" (in Spanish). Productores de Música de España. Retrieved March 26, 2016.
  16. "Yandel - Nunca Me Olvides (Official Video)". YouTube. July 12, 2016. Retrieved July 13, 2016.
  17. Vargas Casiano, Patricia (September 30, 2016). "Génesis Dávila es la "Loba" de Yandel" (in Spanish). Primera Hora. Retrieved October 6, 2016.
  18. 1 2 "Yandel – Chart history – Latin Digital Songs". Billboard. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  19. Cores, Rafael (February 21, 2016). "Diego Torres y Yandel pusieron el sabor en el sorteo de Copa América Centenario" (in Spanish). La Opinión. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  20. "Billboard – Tropical Songs chart – Week of June 18, 2016". Billboard. June 11, 2016. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  21. Estevez, Marjua (December 14, 2015). "Hip-Hop Video Director Spiff TV Will Make Music History In 2016". Vibe. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
  22. "Dangerous Tour". Yandel. Retrieved April 16, 2016.
  23. "Dangerous - Yandel - Credits". Allmusic. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  24. "Oniel Anubis - Bailame (Audio)". YouTube. June 3, 2014. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  25. "Latin Fresh - Ella se arrebata (Video Oficial)". YouTube. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
  26. "Yandel – Chart history – Billboard 200". Billboard. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  27. "Billboard's Latin Rhythm Albums chart – Week of December 19, 2015". Billboard. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  28. "Yandel – Chart history – Top Album Sales". Billboard. Retrieved March 26, 2016.
  29. 1 2 "Yandel – Chart history – Top Latin Albums". Billboard. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  30. "Billboard's Latin Rhythm Albums chart – Week of February 20, 2016". Billboard. Retrieved March 17, 2016.
  31. "Billboard's Top Latin Albums chart – Week of February 20, 2016". Billboard. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  32. 1 2 "American album certifications – YANDEL – Encantadora". Recording Industry Association of America. October 7, 2016. Retrieved October 7, 2016. If necessary, click Advanced, then click Format, then select Album, then click Type, then select Latin, then click SEARCH
  33. "Nunca Me Olvides - Yandel" (in Spanish). Productores de Música de España. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  34. "American album certifications – YANDEL – Dangerous". Recording Industry Association of America. If necessary, click Advanced, then click Format, then select Album, then click Type, then select Latin, then click SEARCH
  35. "2nd Annual TECLA Awards Recognized Excellence in Latino Blogging, Micro-Blogging and Social Media/Digital Marketing at Hispanicize 2016". Corriente Latina. April 8, 2016. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
  36. "Billboard Latin Music Awards 2016: See the Full List of Finalists". Billboard. March 2, 2016. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
  37. Flores, Griselda (June 16, 2016). "Yandel to Receive Special Award at La Musa Awards 2016". Billboard. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.