I think that like most music genres, there's always gonna be people that will hate it. Hip-hop has a stong anti-fan base, just as rave music or even country or rock and roll. Rock, specifically, was the "devil's music" in times of Elvis and the Beatles, just as today Bill O'Reilley may consider Ludacris or Snoop Dog as the Satan o' the times.
I personally LOVE reggaeton... It's a hispanic mix of hip-hop and reggae and the origins of it go back to the barrios of Puerto Rico where it was originally called "Underground." The first stages of it had rappers mainly talking about sex, drugs and violence (much related to the evolution in rap where the predominance was "Gangsta Rap"). Puerto Rican Government officials started cracking down on "Underground" and began censoring it due to the messages it sent to the youth and community... It went as far as the government confiscating all albums from stores and the music being banned. If you were caught blasting that kind of music from your car, a policeman was completely in his right to confiscate your tape or cd and fine you.
Underground music kind of fell off the map for about a year or two and made it's comeback with MUCH cleaner lyrics. It was called "Perreo" for a while, and then the name Reggaeton gained its popularity, to which it still keeps that name. What started in Puerto Rico slowly but surely leaked its way into Central and South America, and now has gained great popularity and has finally earned it's "legitmacy and recognition" here in the U.S. Daddy Yankee has earned Grammys, Don Omar has been nominated, and at dance clubs througout the U.S. you can hear the music blasted and people dancing away to our music. And much to my pride, Puerto Rican artists have held and still hold a monopoly on the hit songs within the genre, even to today. The likes of Tego Calderon, Daddy Yankee, Residente Calle 13, Julio Voltio, Don Omar, Ivy Queen, Hector el Bambino, Wisin y Yandell, Zion y Lennox are the super-heavyweights in the genre and all from Puerto Rico.
Personally, I hate European Electronica music, the kind heard at rave clubs. I also am not a fan of country music either. Like the colors of the spectrum, some have favorites among the choices and not everyone agrees on their favorite one. Music comes in many variances, and for each there is a fan base.
I guess I just hope that no one discounts Reggaeton as something that hasn't earned its spot as legitimate music. Be it called Underground, Perreo, or Reggaeton, it's been around since my days in middle school in the late 80's and I hope it's continues to grow and succeed for decades to come.
Here's a FACT... a VAST majority of the latin kittens LOVE reggaeton, and will shake and twist and move in ways to the music which I think MOST people will consider to be quite sexy, sulty, and mouth watering. Is it good for while performing actual sex?? Personally, I agree with Ciego on this one thing, I think it's a distractor (I personally prefer slow r&b, the likes of Toni Braxton, R. Kelly, Joe, Craig David, etc. during the actual sex acts), but I wholeheartedly believe that reggaeton is a good pre-sex/foreplay mood setter, for dancing, for grinding and moving with alot of touching, and for the girl to feel frisky and sexy for you. Anyone who has had the joy of being at a club in CR when the reggaeton is blasting will concur that it definitely emotes a sexiness within women where they just shake their junk in a way that can make the limpest guy harden brood with enticement and curiousity. Hmmmm, God bless, just the memories of the honey-bunnies dancing to the reggaeton beat never fails to bring a smile to my face...
Ruffnutz
_________________ EVERYONE'S A ROCK STAR IN C.R.!! "Just when I thought I was out... They pull me back in." -- Ruffnutz on trying to quit CRT
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