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.
LyroVerse editor's notes are short interpretation guides, not final verdicts. Read our Editorial policy, Corrections policy, and Methodology for the rules behind public reference pages.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
Sign in to post the first listener note. Reporting stays open to everyone.