Karol G on ‘Tropicoqueta,’ Coachella and Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl gig
In February of last year, Karol G boarded a private plane out of Burbank with 16 passengers on board. Just minutes after takeoff, the Colombian singer โ one of the biggest global stars in Latin and pop music โ saw smoke pouring out of the cabin. The pilots signaled for emergency landing maneuvers; her life flashed before her eyes.
โI was with my parents on the plane, my whole family, and all of us were like, โNo, it canโt be like this,โโ Karol G said, recalling the horrific day in an interview from the top floor of the L.A. Timesโ offices in El Segundo, overlooking the Los Angeles International Airport flight path.
โIt was really terrifying, visually,โ she continued. โSeeing smoke inside the plane, every alarm going off, it was crazy. We were saying goodbye to people. I was just thinking about my one sister that was still in Colombia, that if something happened, whatโs that gonna do to her? We were just sitting, waiting.โ
The pilots quickly brought the plane down to a safe landing in Van Nuys, mercifully avoiding the fates of peers like Jenni Rivera, Aaliyah and Ritchie Valens.
A year and a half later, the now-34-year-old Karol G released โTropicoqueta,โ her fifth LP. The 20-track album spills over with so much abundant life โ searing emotion and refined songcraft, winking humor and quaking bass, Latin music history and โla hora locaโ of her Colombian communityโs block parties โ that it stands in defiance of that near-miss with death.
โTropicoquetaโ is up for Latin pop album at the 2026 Grammys, where Karol G previously won for mรบsica urbana album in 2024. (Sheโs a multiple winner at the Latin Grammys as well.) She also has a Coachella headline slot coming in April, making her the first Latina to top the worldโs most influential festival. And at an incredibly fraught moment for Latinos and Latin culture in the U.S., sheโs bringing a hemisphereโs worth of history and hopes with her onstage.
โItโs kind of my mission. I see it like my purpose,โ she said. โI have a big, heavy responsibility on me being the first Latina to headline Coachella. I need to go and represent my Latina community and speak for my people and for women. Itโs a good opportunity to get to more people around the world, and I think itโs my opportunity to get them involved in the place that I come from.โ
(Bexx Francois / For The Times)
Carolina Giraldo Navarro is from Medellรญn, Colombia. As a teenager, her powerhouse vocals and brash charisma stood out onstage, and in a community famous for its raucous all-night street parties, like the ones she documents on โTropicoquetaโsโ self-titled closing track, she was serious about her music career: She had a brief teenage stint on Colombiaโs version of โThe X Factorโ and went on to school in New York in the mid-2010s to study the record business. Later she racked up hits collaborating with Ozuna, Bad Bunny, J Balvin and others just as her home-base genre of reggaeton ascended to a global phenomenon on its own terms, in its native language.
Karol G turned heads not just for being a young woman in a hypermasculine genre, but for how she both mastered and expanded the genre from the moment she emerged in it. On her breakout 2017 hit with Bad Bunny, โAhora Me Llama,โ she brought both formidable bars as an MC and a poignantly melodic touch to that trap brooder. 2020โs โBichotaโ became a mission-statement single for its bulletproof confidence and how she packed every line with fresh filigrees of hooks.
Her world-conquering 2023 LP โMaรฑana Serรก Bonitoโ had a post-breakup fervor of self-rediscovery, the first all-Spanish-language album by a woman to top the Billboard 200, home to her highest-charting Hot 100 single (the No. 7 โTQG,โ with Shakira) and a Grammy winner for mรบsica urbana album. That year, she played two nights at the Rose Bowl to 120,000 fans, becoming the first Latina to headline a worldwide stadium tour.
What ground was left to break on a new album? Only her own.
โTropicoquetaโ is an adoring, comprehensive sweep through the generations of Latin music that made her. The LP starts with โLa Reina Presenta,โ a blessing from Mexican pop icon Thalรญa, a formative influence who passes the torch here over her classic โPiel Morenaโ โ โYou, showing me your new music? Whatโs the one I liked again? Play it, itโs so good,โ Thalรญa says on the track.
Then come 19 more songs that cover the sweep of Latin music, past, present and future. Thereโs the sweltering bachata of โIvonny Bonita,โ with a guest turn from Pharrell; dips into the regional Colombian folk genre of vallenato; a veritable mariachi symphony on โEse Hombre Es Maloโ; and a heartrending duet with Marco Antonio Solรญs (of Mexican rock legends Los Bukis) on the regal โColeccionando Heridas.โ Even on the sly club-merengue โPapasito,โ the albumโs lone song partially in English, the tune and its charmingly retro video wink at, inhabit and critique the north-south love affair tropes that the first generations of Latina pop icons had to contend with and made magic within.
โI think itโs the riskiest album in my career because I didnโt know how to put all these genres together and have it make sense,โ she said. โAfter โMaรฑana Serรก Bonito,โ I had a lot of pressure. I had everyone, like, asking, โWhatโs next after this album, whatโs next after all of these hits?โ I was like, โOh, my God, what is gonna be next?โ
(Bexx Francois / For The Times)
โBut on this album, my people inspired the concept,โ she continued. โI just wanted to go back to my roots, back to the music that I grew up listening to. In my house, I used to listen to everything because my father was a singer. He used to play for us salsa, merengue, bachata, reggaeton. I started thinking that I wanted my people to feel nostalgic and in a different time in life. With โColleccionando Heridas,โ especially, there are moms with their girls and their grandmas listening together because grandma loves Marco Antonio Solรญs, moms love the song and girls love Karol G. To be music that all the family can listen to, thatโs a super special thing for me.โ
โThere is something that goes beyond doing a musical collaboration with a colleague. It is to live a magical experience, full of sensitivity and authenticity,โ said Solรญs, who performed a moving duet with Karol G at the Latin Grammys. โThat has been my experience with this great artist and human being, who deserves to be in that place that only corresponds to her.โ
โTropicoquetaโ wears its history lightly on record (though Karol G coaxed the legendary Cuban American journalist Cristina Saralegui out of retirement for a context-heavy interview about the album). Itโs laced with a few ultramodern cuts as well: If the reggaeton bounce of the Nina Sky-sampling โLatina Forevaโ felt slight as a standalone single, it takes new form on an album tracing just how a banger like that came to be. โUn Gatito Me Llamรณโ is the most revved-up club track sheโs ever tried, and โSi Antes Te Hubiera Conocidoโ just brought home the Latin Grammy for song of the year, where Karol G gave a feisty speech in defense of its genre range.
โLately, a lot of professional people have an opinion of what people should and shouldnโt do, what they should and shouldnโt like, how they should dress,โ she said while accepting her award. โI started to feel like nothing I was doing was good and like I was losing my magic, like I was losing the wonder. This happened during a strange time in my life, and the only thing that was left from all of that for me was to go back to the root and the intention and return to the purpose of what Iโm doing because I love it, because I like it and because I was born for this.โ
โTropicoquetaโ sounds like a hundred different genres because, to be true, it had to.
โIn Italy recently, I was in an interview, and there was a guy that told me, โLatin music is reggaeton.โ I was like, โYeah, but itโs not just reggaeton.โ He was like, โNo, I cannot tell them apart.โโ
โLike, I know this is hard to explain,โ she said, giggling at the comprehensiveness of his ignorance. โBut we are a universe of cultures and different sounds.โ
Fittingly, at this yearโs Grammys sheโs the front-runner in the more genre-broad Latin pop album category. (Her frequent writing partner, Edgar Barrera, is up for songwriter, non-classical.) And though nods in the big three mainstream categories didnโt materialize, that wasnโt a total surprise for an LP so meticulous about playing with classic Latin genres.
(Bexx Francois / For The Times)
โIโm always gonna celebrate everything that Iโve got in my life, because Iโm the only one that knows how hard it [was] for me to get to this point,โ she said. โIf I donโt get another Grammy, I donโt take it, like, super personal. But meeting Beyoncรฉ at the Grammys was pretty special, right? The first time that I won the Latin Grammy, it was huge, celebrating with a lot of people that I grew up listening to, just saying, โHi, Iโm Carolina from Colombia,โ that was kind of unreal for me. Itโs still unreal for me.โ
In case this wasnโt abundantly clear, Karol G is one of the most commercially, creatively significant artists on the planet, of any genre, full stop. She needs no institutionโs imprimatur, and thereโs no corner of the industry promising anything she hasnโt already achieved.
Yet she still feels ambitious, hungry even, about the two weekends in April next year, when she will headline the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival, wrapping up a bill with Sabrina Carpenter and Justin Bieber as her main-stage mates.
Karol G last played the fest in 2022, a trial run for the history-sweeping philosophy of โTropicoqueta.โ โWhen they first invited me, I was like, โI canโt believe that I had this opportunity, because thereโs a lot of artists that couldnโt perform in there, even having legendary songs.โ Thatโs why I decided Iโm gonna celebrate the songs that opened the door for me. Thatโs why I did โGasolina,โ Ricky Martin, Selena Quintanilla. It was a way for me to honor what all the different artists did for me to be there. I think I had a โbeforeโ and โafterโ with Coachella.โ
While sheโs tight-lipped about how next yearโs set will update her raucous stadium tour, she did promise โa lot of different worlds for this show. I want to show all the evolution that Iโve had in my whole career, a really huge, innovative show.โ
For her, thereโs still something tantalizing about topping a mixed-genre bill before an audience that may not have heard her music at all. Is it weird to be one of the biggest musicians on Earth and yet still, in some circles, be introducing herself?
โI love that. If you are on tour, you know that the people there are waiting to see you, and they already know the songs,โ she said. โBut festivals give you the opportunity to open doors for more people that donโt know your music, who donโt know nothing.โ
Coachella is just one place sheโs opening more of her life to. In her May Netflix doc โKarol G: Tomorrow Was Beautiful,โ she spoke about being sexually harassed and retaliated against by a former manager when she was a teenager.
โItโs always a challenge, you wake up and you think you forget things, but youโre never gonna forget,โ she said, recalling that painful era in her career. โThat part was specifically hard to put out, but my team were saying, โThereโs a lot of people that are going to understand you, and they have their own crosses behind them getting really heavy. So maybe if they see through you, theyโre gonna get more power to hold them.โ It was hard, but I think Iโm an instrument of something.โ
She also headlined the NFLโs halftime show in its Brazilian debut in September, an homage to her South American neighborโs rhythms and plumage bookended by the United Statesโ flagship expression of sporting and economic muscle. โWe donโt really do American football in our Latino countries,โ she said. โSo when the NFL called for that specific show, I told them Iโm gonna bring the flavor of this album. โYou are American football, but Iโm Karol G and my album is about my roots.โ They were like, โNo, we love that. Actually, thatโs what we want.โ I loved that show, it was an opportunity to keep growing our movement.โ
So what does she make of the right-wing backlash to her peer Bad Bunny โ an outspoken American citizen of Puerto Rican descent who declined to tour the U.S. due to ICE raid fears โ performing in Spanish at next yearโs Super Bowl?
โItโs crazy. I think itโs only a few people that think that way, and most are really enjoying the decision to have him on the stage,โ she said. โThe people that are saying no, theyโre powerful and they have a voice, so people listen and they make it like a big deal, but I can tell that Bad Bunny is going to kill it. Heโs ready for that. Heโs part of both worlds โ Puerto Rico is an American territory, and at the same time, is Latino. I think, for the moment that we are having as humans, itโs great to have him represent everything. Theyโre just gonna make him do it even better and higher.โ
What first made the likes of Bad Bunny and Karol G remarkable has, subtly, emerged as a key feature of their massive international appeal. No one blinks at Karol G headlining the worldโs biggest festivals singing entirely in Spanish, drinking deeply from Latin music history. Reggaeton is the backbeat of the Global South and thrills the North; โTropicoquetaโ was a gift of the music she adored growing up with, it belongs to the world now too.
โWhen you start doing music, you just do music that you love, and everything is so good. But then you get teams, and they have expectations about numbers. They have expectations about streams, consumption, everything. That puts a lot of pressure on the artist,โ she said. โYou can get lost between the purpose and the results, and this can change all the art. So I tried all the time to be focused on my purpose, on what I want to do.
โLike, I donโt want to do an album in English, because maybe itโs time to do a crossover thing, because itโs gonna get more people. No, I donโt want to do it that way. It would be falling expectations of who I am. I just want to do that if I feel that,โ she said. โโMaรฑanaโ killed for streaming. But the things that โTropicoquetaโ brought me are super different. I thought I was doing an album for my Latina community, and it brought me fans from all over the world that I didnโt expect. Thatโs why you have to take care of the purpose instead of the result. The success, the love, thatโs gonna be gone one day. The unique, real thing that I have forever is the feeling for my music. This is the one that I have to take care of the most.โ
(Bexx Francois / For The Times)