Urbano latino

Don Omar

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Shazam Global Chart Top 50 AppearancesAll songs and collaborations from Don Omar that have reached the Top 50 of the Shazam Global Chart
OVERVIEW
2Top 50 Entries
Track artwork for track titled Anda Sola by Don Omar
Track artwork for track titled Bandoleros (feat. Tego Calderón) by Don Omar
41Days in Top 50
Don Omar has landed 2 songs in the Top 50 of the Shazam Global Chart, peaking at No. 14! Across those appearances, Don Omar has spent a combined 41 days on the chart.
SONG
PEAK POSITION
DAYS IN TOP 50
TOP 50 DEBUT
Track artwork for track titled Anda Sola by Don Omar
Track artwork for track titled Anda Sola by Don Omar
Don Omar
#1426Jun 27, 2023
"Anda Sola" by Don Omar achieved a peak position of No. 14 on the Shazam Global Chart and remained in the Top 50 for 26 day(s).
Released
2006
Total Shazams
1M
Days in Top 50
26
Top 50 Debut
Jun 27, 2023
"Anda Sola" by Don Omar achieved a peak position of No. 14 on the Shazam Global Chart and remained in the Top 50 for 26 day(s).
Released
2006
Total Shazams
1M
Days in Top 50
26
Top 50 Debut
Jun 27, 2023
#2615Jul 15, 2021
"Bandoleros (feat. Tego Calderón)" by Don Omar peaked at No. 26 on the Shazam Global Chart, where the song spent a total of 15 day(s) in the Top 50.
Released
2005
Total Shazams
8M
Days in Top 50
15
Top 50 Debut
Jul 15, 2021
"Bandoleros (feat. Tego Calderón)" by Don Omar peaked at No. 26 on the Shazam Global Chart, where the song spent a total of 15 day(s) in the Top 50.
Released
2005
Total Shazams
8M
Days in Top 50
15
Top 50 Debut
Jul 15, 2021

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About Don Omar

Listen to Don Omar, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
Born
February 10, 1978
Genre
Urbano latino

Artist Links
Endowed with a powerful bark that cuts cleanly through synth-heavy riddims, Don Omar emerged as one of the key figures in reggaetón’s international explosion of the early 2000s. Born William Omar Landrón Rivera in 1978, in the Santurce barrio of San Juan, Puerto Rico, he was a teenager when the genre took shape in the ‘90s, and he came up under pioneering artists like Luny Tunes and Noriega, cutting his teeth on raw mixtape cuts. By his breakout hit, 2003’s “Dale Don Dale,” Don Omar had perfected his style, switching between monotone, dancehall-inspired sing-rapping and melodic hooks delivered with a flamenco-like trill. The same year’s “Dile” paired reggaetón’s signature drums with another island export, bachata, confirming Omar’s role as a standard-bearer for Puerto Rican sounds.
That the working-class sound of reggaetón still struggled against government criticism only made Don Omar’s success all the sweeter. Following his 2003 debut, The Last Don, 2006’s King of Kings smashed glass ceilings to become reggaetón’s highest-charting album yet, debuting atop Billboard’s Top Latin Albums Chart and reaching No. 7 on the Billboard 200 Chart. But Don Omar was uninterested in remaining in his stylistic comfort zone. For 2010’s “Danza Kuduro,” Omar teamed up with the Portuguese-French musician Lucenzo, fusing reggaetón with Angolan sounds. And though Omar announced his retirement in 2017, he bounced back in 2019 with The Last Album; the following year, Bad Bunny tapped him for “PA’ ROMPERLA”—a passing of the torch confirming Omar’s status in the annals of música urbana.
Influenced by Don OmarDon Omar has influenced the music of Farruko, Aventura, Fabolous and more.

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