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Mexican pop-rock folk singer Natalia Lafourcade took home Thursday's coveted Latin Grammy for Album of the Year, at a socially distanced gala where high hopes for reggaeton fell short. Lafourcade won the night's top prize for "Un canto por Mexico," after reggaeton superstar J Balvin had led the pack with a record 13 nominations. But in the end the Colombian took home just a single trophy, as fellow leaders of the massively popular style also lost out in the general field in what had been billed as the year the genre would get its due. Spaniard Alejandro Sanz snagged the coveted Best Record for "Contigo," as Puerto Rican Residente -- a co-founder of the alt-rap group Calle 13 -- won Best Song, which honors songwriting, for "Rene." The 21st edition of the awards normally held in Las Vegas were instead anchored in Miami, with a slew of virtual performances, including from Anitta in Rio de Janeiro and Bad Bunny from San Juan. Balvin, decked out in a white suit with a heart image bleeding from his chest, was the telecast's first winner, taking home Best Urban Album for "Colores." "What the world needs right now is color," said Balvin in accepting the award, noting in particular the Latin American countries hard hit by Hurricanes Eta and Iota. The disappointment in the general categories for reggaeton -- a massively popular Puerto Rican-born amalgam of Caribbean beats and hip-hop influences -- follows years of snubs by the Latin American Recording Academy. After much protest this year the institution gave the genre its own category, with Latin trap king Bad Bunny taking home that prize, for "Yo Perreo Sola." Oscar-nominated Mexican actress Yalitza Aparicio -- famous for her role in Alfonso Cuaron's "Roma" -- hosted the event, flanked by singers Carlos Rivera and Ana Brenda. Miami's own Pitbull paid tribute to frontline workers fighting the Covid-19 pandemic, with special guests including nurses and firefighters joining the act. Most of the 53 awards were handed out prior to broadcast, with performers including the norteno act Los Tigres del Norte and Colombian crooner Carlos Vives taking home trophies. Residente won the gramophone in another new category, Best Rap/Hip-Hop song, for "Antes Que El Mundo Se Acabe" -- a track about love in the pandemic. Ricky Martin won Best Pop vocal Album for "Pausa" as Ozuna and Spanish flamenco experimentalist Rosalia won two prizes in the "urban" category for "Yo x ti, tu x me." Rosalia, who was 2019's big Latin Grammy winner, also won for Best Short Form Music Video for "TKN," a clip featuring rapper Travis Scott. Reggaeton's 2020 letdown follows years of controversy that came to a head in the award show's previous edition, with superstars including Balvin, Bad Bunny, Ozuna, Maluma, Daddy Yankee, Karol G and Nicky Jam snubbed in the general categories. "Without reggaeton, there's no Latin Grammys" read a slogan in Spanish that mushroomed across social media, along with an image of the Grammy logo crossed out with a large red "X." Balvin went so far as to skip the 2019 show, as Bad Bunny, who won that year's Best Urban Music Album, decried "people who still have trouble accepting that reggaeton is a genre established for more than two decades." lm-mdo/st
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2020-11-20
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Bad BunnyMaluma (singer)Karol GMusic of MexicoPausaDaddy Yankee2009 flu pandemicYalitza AparicioSaint RosaliaAlejandro SanzHip hop musicAhabTravis ScottPit bullLas Vegas ValleyResidenteSan Juan, Puerto RicoBleedingGrammy AwardAnittaMartin CraneFolk musicCaribbeanSpanish languageRomani peopleAntes (people)MiamiPuerto RicoPortland TimbersTu (cuneiform)El Mundo (Spain)Rio de JaneiroSocial mediaMexicoUnited StatesCoronavirus disease 2019Latin Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal AlbumLatin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music VideoCalle 13 (band)Nicky JamARIA Award for Best Urban AlbumLatin Grammy Award for Best Urban Music AlbumCarlos VivesNorteño (music)Carlos RiveraLos Tigres del NorteNatalia LafourcadeOzuna (singer)Phonograph recordLatin trapSolaAlfonso CuarónThe DisappointmentJ BalvinCroonerReggaetonThe Recording AcademyLatin Grammy AwardFlamencoLatin music

