A Puerto Rican-rooted artist who broke through with 2019's "3 AM" and built a catalog of streetwise collaborations.
For a quick sense of his style, try "Cheque (part. Jon Z y Noriel)" or the earlier "3 AM." They're both straightforward, no-fuss tracks that show what he does well.
Carrión's music pulls from both his Kansas City upbringing and Puerto Rico's reggaeton scene, giving his songs a grounded, everyday feel. Tracks like "Cheque (part. Jon Z y Noriel)" and "Discoteca (part. Yandel, Cazzu)" show how he fits into the wider Latin urban landscape without losing his own tone. His 2020 arrest for drug possession added a real-world edge to his public story, but he kept releasing albums like Sen2 Kbrn Vol. 2 and El Que Habla Con Dios.
He first got attention with "3 AM (part. Brytiago)" in 2019, a simple melody that caught on. Since then, he's put out albums nearly every year, from Monarca to 2023's El Que Habla Con Dios, working with names like J Balvin and Karol G along the way.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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