ALBUMMAMACITA REMIXESBlack Eyed Peas, Ozuna & J. Rey Soul
ALBUMNibiruOzuna
ALBUMAuraOzuna
ALBUMOdiseaOzuna
Ozuna's Popular Music Videos
Te Boté (feat. Darell, Nicky Jam & Ozuna) [Remix]
Nio García, Casper Mágico & Bad Bunny
Taki Taki (feat. Selena Gomez, Ozuna & Cardi B)
DJ Snake
Soldado Y Profeta (feat. Ozuna, Almighty & Ñengo Flow)
Anuel AA
China (feat. J Balvin & Ozuna)
Daddy Yankee, KAROL G & Anuel AA
Escápate Conmigo (feat. Ozuna)
Wisin
Adicto
Tainy, Anuel AA & Ozuna
Te Robaré
Nicky Jam & Ozuna
La Formula (feat. Chris Jeday)
De La Ghetto, Daddy Yankee & Ozuna
Confia (Remix)
Juhn & Ozuna
Yo x Ti, Tu x Mi
ROSALÍA & Ozuna
Artist Playlists
Ozuna Essentials
Uplifting crooning over elegant reggaetón rhythms.
Ozuna Video Essentials
The reggaetón star gives his music new life in visual celebrations.
At Home With Ozuna: The Playlist
“I got the same hunger—that’s the secret. I go to the studio every day.”
Artist Biography
In an Apple Music interview breaking down his 2020 album ENOC, Ozuna described the inspiration behind a track called “El Reggaetón.” But wait—reggaetón? Wasn’t that more of, like, a 2000s term? Maybe. But just remember how long it took for the world to learn it. “We insisted and insisted,” Ozuna said, speaking in translation. “And now we’re going to take it away when people have managed to catch it? We can’t.” Alongside collaborators Bad Bunny and J Balvin, Ozuna represents a wave of young artists helping shepherd Latinx pop from specialty market into the global mainstream while staying firmly rooted in the places and sounds they came from.
Born Juan Rosado in San Juan, in 1992, Ozuna was raised on reggaetón pioneers Daddy Yankee, Don Omar, and Wisin & Yandel alongside American rap and more traditional sounds like salsa and bachata. After a brief stint trying to get his career off the ground in New York City, he came back to Puerto Rico—a move that helped clarify his priorities not just as an artist, but as a representative of his place and people. Even on his collaborations (“Taki Taki” with DJ Snake, Selena Gomez, and Cardi B, or “Mamacita” with the Black Eyed Peas), you don’t sense Ozuna stretching to cross over. If anything, the undiluted quality of Ozuna’s music—like Balvin’s and Bunny’s—represents the changing demographics of modern mainstream pop. We know the word reggaetón now, sure. But in Ozuna’s opinion, there’s no harm in saying it again.