Biography
Daddy Yankee rose to prominence as a driving force in reggaeton, moving the style from its underground origins into broad commercial acceptance from the early 2000s onward. His 2004 album Barrio Fino marked the decisive mainstream arrival, propelled especially by the worldwide single “Gasolina,” which crossed cultural lines and established him as a global star while he operated without major-label affiliation. During that period he set sales records as the decade’s leading Latin artist. Over time his reach extended beyond recordings to encompass the ABC Radio Networks syndicated program Daddy Yankee on Fuego and the Paramount Pictures feature Talento de Barrio. Between full studio projects such as the 2012 release Prestige he issued individual tracks and the King Daddy mixtape alongside the production duo Los De La Nazza—comprising Eliezer “Musicólogo” García and Eduardo “Menes” López—before beginning work on its follow-up in 2014. Initially planned as King Daddy II: Elemento DY, the project was retitled El Disco Duro and postponed repeatedly from its intended 2016 launch. In 2017 he joined Luis Fonsi on the worldwide phenomenon “Despacito,” which reached the summit in 47 territories. Additional charting singles arrived in 2021 with “Problema” and “El Gran Robo, Pt. 2.” A decade-long interval between albums ended with the number-one LegenDaddy in 2022, after which he issued further tracks such as 2023’s “Bonita” despite earlier retirement statements.
Born Ramón Ayala, also known as Raymond, on February 3, 1977, in Río Piedras—the largest district of San Juan, Puerto Rico—Daddy Yankee was raised in a household steeped in music. His father performed as a bongosero, while numerous relatives on his mother’s side were musicians; he himself sang from childhood and displayed early skill at improvisation. As he matured he gravitated toward Spanish-language hip-hop, particularly the socially conscious work of Vico C, and became immersed in neighborhood street life at the Villa Kennedy housing project in San Juan. The nickname “Yankee” derived from Puerto Rican usage denoting “someone tall, who is big in what he does,” as he explained in a 2005 Billboard conversation.
He entered the reggaeton scene during its formative years in the early 1990s, when San Juan DJs blended hip-hop and dancehall reggae for vocalists to freestyle over the resulting beats. The combination gained traction locally, especially at the longstanding club night known as The Noise, which nurtured a circle of DJs and rappers. Another central figure in early reggaeton was the mixtape DJ and producer Playero, on whose Playero 37 (1992) Yankee first appeared as a guest. At age 18 he issued his debut full-length, No Mercy (1995), again with Playero. The album made little immediate impact, so he remained active in the underground circuit through the rest of the decade. Late in the 1990s he performed as a duo with Nicky Jam, and one of his compositions, “Posición,” recorded with Alberto Stylee, appeared on the 1998 soundtrack for One Tough Cop.
From 2000 forward he advanced his profile through self-released projects. El Cartel (2000) and El Cartel, Vol. 2 (2001) followed in rapid succession, both featuring numerous guests in mixtape style; however, El Cangri.com (2002) delivered the decisive momentum that carried him beyond Puerto Rico. Powered by “Latigazo,” which received airplay in Miami and New York, the set reached number 43 on Billboard’s Top Latin Albums chart while distributed solely by the Puerto Rican independent VI Music. Capitalizing on that breakthrough, he compiled Los Homerun-es (2003), a Top Ten collection of scattered tracks that included the new single “Segurosqui” alongside older Playero material from a decade earlier.
Reggaeton stood on the verge of wider success at that moment, with landmark albums including Don Omar’s The Last Don (2003), Tego Calderón’s El Abayarde (2003), and Luny Tunes’ Mas Flow (2003) gaining traction in Miami and New York alongside Puerto Rico, accompanied by numerous additional releases. That context prepared the ground for Barrio Fino (2004), issued in July by VI Music, which debuted at number one on the Top Latin Albums chart—the first reggaeton title to achieve the position. The album held the summit for roughly a year and remained prominent well into 2005, ultimately selling more than a million copies in the United States during its run.
Much of that longevity stemmed from “Gasolina,” a celebratory single whose impact was so extensive that the track itself came to represent reggaeton for many listeners, particularly English speakers previously unfamiliar with the genre. Observers likened its boundary-crossing popularity to that of “Macarena,” another Latin party anthem that became a dance-club staple worldwide. Although “Gasolina” took several months after the album’s release to ignite fully, by November 2004 it had entered the Billboard Hot 100 and later peaked at number 32. On the Latin charts it climbed only to number 17, whereas “Lo Que Pasó, Pasó” served as the stronger Latin-market hit, reaching number two. Barrio Fino also yielded “Sabor a Melao” featuring salsa superstar Andy Montañez, “No Me Dejes Solo” with Wisin & Yandel, and the English-language track “Like You.” The album’s performance simultaneously elevated Luny Tunes—who handled half the LP and all its major singles—to their own prominence as reggaeton’s premier hitmakers.
Major-label interest intensified as a result. Machete Music, a Universal imprint focused on Latin urban music, arranged to reissue Los Homerun-es in March 2005 and later Barrio Fino in December 2006. VI Music responded with Ahora le Toca al Cangri (2005), a live CD/DVD captured in Puerto Rico in 2003. While labels pursued Yankee, Interscope president Jimmy Iovine traveled personally to Puerto Rico to negotiate; the discussions produced a joint venture between Interscope and Yankee’s El Cartel Records. Their initial output was Barrio Fino en Directo (2005), a CD/DVD mixing concert recordings and fresh material. The lead single “Rompe” outperformed “Gasolina,” reaching number 24 on the Hot 100 and holding the top spot on Hot Latin Tracks for 15 weeks.
Further partnerships proliferated. Yankee aligned his name, likeness, and recordings with Reebok footwear, Pepsi beverages, Citroën automobiles, and ABC radio. He established the Corazón Guerrero charity to assist former inmates and collaborated with CMN (Cardenas Marketing Network) on a tour spanning North, Central, and South America.
Throughout this activity he continued developing his next studio effort, El Cartel: The Big Boss (2007), a high-profile project uniting marquee collaborators such as will.i.am, Akon, and Scott Storch. Advance single “Impacto,” including its bilingual remix with Fergie, preceded the eagerly awaited June release. He also starred in the film Talento de Barrio, which set attendance records in Puerto Rico and supported its accompanying soundtrack performed with multiple guests. His 2010 album Mundial incorporated fewer hip-hop and pop elements in favor of Latin influences and included the single “Descontrol.” Prestige, his sixth album, followed in 2011 and generated charting tracks such as “Ven Conmigo” and “Lovumba.”
In 2012 the El Cartel-affiliated producers Musicologo & Menes launched the El Imperio Nazza series of collaboration albums; Yankee contributed to the seventh installment, King Daddy Edition, which also featured Divino, Yandel, Farruko, Arcángel, and J Alvarez. Top Ten Hot Latin hits “Sígueme y Te Sigo” and “Vaivén” appeared in 2015, followed by 2016’s “Shaky Shaky,” which spread via a social-network app and a hypermarket campaign. The decisive international breakthrough arrived in 2017 through the multi-platinum collaboration “Despacito” with Luis Fonsi and Justin Bieber, which topped charts across dozens of countries and matched the record for the longest consecutive run at number one on the Billboard Hot 100.
After “Despacito,” Yankee released the multi-platinum single “Dura” at the start of 2018. Subsequent tracks included 2019’s “Con Calma,” which incorporated Canadian one-hit wonder Snow’s interpolation of his 1992 song “Informer” and led both the Hot Latin Songs and Latin Airplay charts while earning a Latin Grammy nomination for Best Urban Fusion/Performance. He postponed El Disco Duro repeatedly, noting that singles had grown more pertinent than complete albums. Non-album material continued with the three-part live series 2K20 in 2020, the 2020 tracks “Don Don” featuring Anuel AA and “PAM,” the 2021 songs “El Pony,” “Problema,” “El Gran Robo, Pt. 2,” and “Métele Al Perreo,” plus remixes such as “Tata” and “Sal y Perrea.”
The extended album hiatus concluded with LegenDaddy in April 2022. Issued a full decade after Prestige, it followed his declaration of retirement from the music industry that December after a farewell tour. The set debuted at number one on the Top Latin Albums chart and number eight on the Billboard 200. Despite the retirement announcement he issued further singles, among them the early-2023 track “La Hora y El Día” with Justin Quiles and Dalex and the later “Bonita.” The non-album single “Loveo” reached number 11 on Billboard’s Latin Rhythm Airplay chart in 2024.
Born Ramón Ayala, also known as Raymond, on February 3, 1977, in Río Piedras—the largest district of San Juan, Puerto Rico—Daddy Yankee was raised in a household steeped in music. His father performed as a bongosero, while numerous relatives on his mother’s side were musicians; he himself sang from childhood and displayed early skill at improvisation. As he matured he gravitated toward Spanish-language hip-hop, particularly the socially conscious work of Vico C, and became immersed in neighborhood street life at the Villa Kennedy housing project in San Juan. The nickname “Yankee” derived from Puerto Rican usage denoting “someone tall, who is big in what he does,” as he explained in a 2005 Billboard conversation.
He entered the reggaeton scene during its formative years in the early 1990s, when San Juan DJs blended hip-hop and dancehall reggae for vocalists to freestyle over the resulting beats. The combination gained traction locally, especially at the longstanding club night known as The Noise, which nurtured a circle of DJs and rappers. Another central figure in early reggaeton was the mixtape DJ and producer Playero, on whose Playero 37 (1992) Yankee first appeared as a guest. At age 18 he issued his debut full-length, No Mercy (1995), again with Playero. The album made little immediate impact, so he remained active in the underground circuit through the rest of the decade. Late in the 1990s he performed as a duo with Nicky Jam, and one of his compositions, “Posición,” recorded with Alberto Stylee, appeared on the 1998 soundtrack for One Tough Cop.
From 2000 forward he advanced his profile through self-released projects. El Cartel (2000) and El Cartel, Vol. 2 (2001) followed in rapid succession, both featuring numerous guests in mixtape style; however, El Cangri.com (2002) delivered the decisive momentum that carried him beyond Puerto Rico. Powered by “Latigazo,” which received airplay in Miami and New York, the set reached number 43 on Billboard’s Top Latin Albums chart while distributed solely by the Puerto Rican independent VI Music. Capitalizing on that breakthrough, he compiled Los Homerun-es (2003), a Top Ten collection of scattered tracks that included the new single “Segurosqui” alongside older Playero material from a decade earlier.
Reggaeton stood on the verge of wider success at that moment, with landmark albums including Don Omar’s The Last Don (2003), Tego Calderón’s El Abayarde (2003), and Luny Tunes’ Mas Flow (2003) gaining traction in Miami and New York alongside Puerto Rico, accompanied by numerous additional releases. That context prepared the ground for Barrio Fino (2004), issued in July by VI Music, which debuted at number one on the Top Latin Albums chart—the first reggaeton title to achieve the position. The album held the summit for roughly a year and remained prominent well into 2005, ultimately selling more than a million copies in the United States during its run.
Much of that longevity stemmed from “Gasolina,” a celebratory single whose impact was so extensive that the track itself came to represent reggaeton for many listeners, particularly English speakers previously unfamiliar with the genre. Observers likened its boundary-crossing popularity to that of “Macarena,” another Latin party anthem that became a dance-club staple worldwide. Although “Gasolina” took several months after the album’s release to ignite fully, by November 2004 it had entered the Billboard Hot 100 and later peaked at number 32. On the Latin charts it climbed only to number 17, whereas “Lo Que Pasó, Pasó” served as the stronger Latin-market hit, reaching number two. Barrio Fino also yielded “Sabor a Melao” featuring salsa superstar Andy Montañez, “No Me Dejes Solo” with Wisin & Yandel, and the English-language track “Like You.” The album’s performance simultaneously elevated Luny Tunes—who handled half the LP and all its major singles—to their own prominence as reggaeton’s premier hitmakers.
Major-label interest intensified as a result. Machete Music, a Universal imprint focused on Latin urban music, arranged to reissue Los Homerun-es in March 2005 and later Barrio Fino in December 2006. VI Music responded with Ahora le Toca al Cangri (2005), a live CD/DVD captured in Puerto Rico in 2003. While labels pursued Yankee, Interscope president Jimmy Iovine traveled personally to Puerto Rico to negotiate; the discussions produced a joint venture between Interscope and Yankee’s El Cartel Records. Their initial output was Barrio Fino en Directo (2005), a CD/DVD mixing concert recordings and fresh material. The lead single “Rompe” outperformed “Gasolina,” reaching number 24 on the Hot 100 and holding the top spot on Hot Latin Tracks for 15 weeks.
Further partnerships proliferated. Yankee aligned his name, likeness, and recordings with Reebok footwear, Pepsi beverages, Citroën automobiles, and ABC radio. He established the Corazón Guerrero charity to assist former inmates and collaborated with CMN (Cardenas Marketing Network) on a tour spanning North, Central, and South America.
Throughout this activity he continued developing his next studio effort, El Cartel: The Big Boss (2007), a high-profile project uniting marquee collaborators such as will.i.am, Akon, and Scott Storch. Advance single “Impacto,” including its bilingual remix with Fergie, preceded the eagerly awaited June release. He also starred in the film Talento de Barrio, which set attendance records in Puerto Rico and supported its accompanying soundtrack performed with multiple guests. His 2010 album Mundial incorporated fewer hip-hop and pop elements in favor of Latin influences and included the single “Descontrol.” Prestige, his sixth album, followed in 2011 and generated charting tracks such as “Ven Conmigo” and “Lovumba.”
In 2012 the El Cartel-affiliated producers Musicologo & Menes launched the El Imperio Nazza series of collaboration albums; Yankee contributed to the seventh installment, King Daddy Edition, which also featured Divino, Yandel, Farruko, Arcángel, and J Alvarez. Top Ten Hot Latin hits “Sígueme y Te Sigo” and “Vaivén” appeared in 2015, followed by 2016’s “Shaky Shaky,” which spread via a social-network app and a hypermarket campaign. The decisive international breakthrough arrived in 2017 through the multi-platinum collaboration “Despacito” with Luis Fonsi and Justin Bieber, which topped charts across dozens of countries and matched the record for the longest consecutive run at number one on the Billboard Hot 100.
After “Despacito,” Yankee released the multi-platinum single “Dura” at the start of 2018. Subsequent tracks included 2019’s “Con Calma,” which incorporated Canadian one-hit wonder Snow’s interpolation of his 1992 song “Informer” and led both the Hot Latin Songs and Latin Airplay charts while earning a Latin Grammy nomination for Best Urban Fusion/Performance. He postponed El Disco Duro repeatedly, noting that singles had grown more pertinent than complete albums. Non-album material continued with the three-part live series 2K20 in 2020, the 2020 tracks “Don Don” featuring Anuel AA and “PAM,” the 2021 songs “El Pony,” “Problema,” “El Gran Robo, Pt. 2,” and “Métele Al Perreo,” plus remixes such as “Tata” and “Sal y Perrea.”
The extended album hiatus concluded with LegenDaddy in April 2022. Issued a full decade after Prestige, it followed his declaration of retirement from the music industry that December after a farewell tour. The set debuted at number one on the Top Latin Albums chart and number eight on the Billboard 200. Despite the retirement announcement he issued further singles, among them the early-2023 track “La Hora y El Día” with Justin Quiles and Dalex and the later “Bonita.” The non-album single “Loveo” reached number 11 on Billboard’s Latin Rhythm Airplay chart in 2024.
Albums

LAMENTO EN BAILE
2025

BEACHY (Play-N-Skillz House Remix)
2023

LEGENDADDY
2022

No Pare
2021

King Daddy
2013

Muve Sessions: Prestige
2012

Prestige
2012

Mundial (Deluxe Version)
2010

Mundial
2010

Talento de Barrio
2008

El Cartel: The Big Boss
2007

Barrio Fino En Directo
2006

Barrio Fino (Bonus Track Version)
2004

Los Homerun-es
2003

El Cangri.com
2002
Singles

Sonríele
2025

Yo Voy
2025

En el Desierto
2025

Bailando en la Lluvia
2024

Gasolina (Bhangra Remix)
2024

LOVEO
2024

Donante de Sangre
2024

BONITA
2023

BAILAR CONTIGO
2023

LA BABY
2023

Yankee 150
2023

BEACHY
2023

Gasolina (feat. Myke Towers) (Safari Riot Remix)
2023

LA HORA Y EL DÍA
2023

PANTIES Y BRASIERES
2023

ULALA (OOH LA LA)
2022

Mayor Que Usted
2022

Sal y Perrea (Remix)
2021

MÉTELE AL PERREO
2021

TATA
2021

SÚBELE EL VOLUMEN
2021

PROBLEMA (Lunytunes Version)
2021

EL PONY
2021

PROBLEMA
2021

Corona
2020

De Vuelta Pa' La Vuelta
2020

Don Don (Remix)
2020

Don Don
2020

Relación (Remix)
2020

Bésame
2020

PAM
2020

Muévelo
2020

Instagram
2019

China
2019

Runaway
2019

Soltera (Remix)
2019

No Lo Trates
2019

Baila Baila Baila (Remix) [feat. Farruko, Anuel Aa]
2019

Con Calma (Remix)
2019

Con Calma
2019

El Combo Me Llama 2.1
2018

Adictiva
2018

Asesina
2018

Inolvidable (Remix)
2018

Como (Spanish Version)
2018

Como
2018

Buena Vida
2018

Zum Zum
2018

Hielo
2018

Dura (Remix)
2018

Azukita
2018

El Combo Me Llama 2
2018

Dura
2018

Otra Cosa
2017

El Desorden
2017

Havana
2017

Vuelve
2017

La Formula (feat. Chris Jeday)
2017

Despacito (Versión Urbana/Sky)
2017

Despacito (Major Lazer & MOSKA Remix)
2017

Hula Hoop
2017

La Rompe Corazones
2017

Shaky Shaky (Remix)
2016

La Nueva Y La Ex (Tropical Remix)
2016

Shaky Shaky
2016

Not a Crime
2016

Mayor Que Yo 3
2015

Vaivén
2015

Baby Boo
2015

Sábado Rebelde (Damn Frog Trap Remix)
2015

Sígueme Y Te Sigo
2015

Sábado Rebelde
2015

La Calle Me Hizo
2014

Ora Por Mí
2014

Self Made (feat. French Montana)
2013

Lovumba (Hindi Version: Dil-Ruba Lovumba)
2013

Lovumba (feat. Motif)
2012

Bailando Fue
2008

Rompe (Remix)
2006

Rompe
2006

Sacala
2005

Gasolina
2005
Live



