Safaera

"Safaera" (a Puerto Rican expression for "promiscuity, debauchery or substance abuse")[1] is a song by Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny featuring Jowell & Randy and Ñengo Flow. It was released on February 29, 2020, as track 14 of Bad Bunny's second studio album YHLQMDLG.[2]

"Safaera"
Song by Bad Bunny featuring Jowell & Randy and Ñengo Flow
from the album YHLQMDLG
LanguageSpanish
ReleasedFebruary 29, 2020 (2020-02-29)
GenreReggaeton
Length4:55
LabelRimas
Songwriter(s)Benito Martínez
Producer(s)
Audio video
"Safaera" on YouTube

The song reached number one in Spain in its fifth week, becoming Bad Bunny's seventh song, as well as Jowell & Randy's and Ñengo Flow's first song to peak atop the charts.[3]

Background

Bad Bunny and Jowell had previously talked about a collaboration in the past, in a time when Bad Bunny was recording mostly trap songs, a genre that Jowell dislikes.[4] They said to each other that they would work together if one of them was willing to make either a trap or a reggaeton track.[4] A year later, after listening to Bad Bunny's "Mía" featuring Drake, Jowell liked the single's style and called Rimas Music to arrange a recording session with him, but he was very busy at the time.[4] Three weeks before the release of YHLQMDLG, Bad Bunny called Jowell & Randy, who were in Puerto Rico, in order to work together for the album.[4] "Safaera" was produced by Latin Grammy Award-winner Tainy and Bad Bunny's disc jockey DJ Orma.

In March 2020, the song inspired the "SafaeraChallenge" and the "#AbuelaChallenge", both of which went viral on the app TikTok. The latter saw especially elderly people dancing to the song while being placed in quarantine due to COVID-19.[5]

Composition

Due to its structural complexity, the song was described as a "reggaetón symphony and perreo megamix". During its course, the song "ventures through at least eight beat changes, five different rap flows, and 10+ years of references". The track makes use of numerous samples throughout its runtime, which include a guitar riff from "Get Ur Freak On" by Missy Elliott, a bassline from "Could You Be Loved" by Bob Marley, synths from DJ Nelson's and DJ Goldy's Xtassy Reggae, an opening line from Cosculluela's "Pa' La Pared" and a sample from Alexis & Fido's "El Tiburón", among others.[6]

Critical reception

The song received widespread acclaim from music critics. In a review for bad bunny Pitchfork, Isabelia Herrera awarded the song the accolade "Best New Track" and went on to describe the track as "a technical masterpiece" in which the artist "harnesses this musical nostalgia and transforms it into an antidote for the most formulaic tendencies of the pop-reggaetón panorama".[6] Griselda Flores of Billboard picked the song as one of the album's essential tracks, saying that the rapper "takes it way back with this old-school reggaetón song" and praised it for "its contagious beats", as well as "Missy Elliott's famous riff from "Get Your Freak On"".[7] Rolling Stone's Suzy Exposito referred to the song as "five-minutes of unadulterated chaos" and opined that Bad Bunny "gets to ride a wave of reggaeton he was much too young to participate in the first time around".[8]

Spotify removal

On May 14, 2020, "Safaera" was removed from Spotify. Bad Bunny claimed on a live video with Residente that he knew the reason behind the removal but preferred not to talk about it to avoid controversy.[9] It was added back to the platform on May 15, the following day. Spotify then stated that it was due to a sample clearance.[10]

Charts

Chart (2020) Peak
position
Argentina (Argentina Hot 100)[11] 4
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[3] 1
US Billboard Hot 100[12] 81
US Hot Latin Songs (Billboard)[13] 4
US Rolling Stone Top 100[14] 49

Certifications

Region CertificationCertified units/sales
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[15] 2× Platinum 80,000

sales+streaming figures based on certification alone

gollark: I made an automatic rap generation programIt works by appending an unrelated word which rhymes with the end of the previous line amTo every second lineThis totally counts as rap mineVery valid rap indeedI win esolangs now speed
gollark: Nobody can diss my rhymesBecause they are made from fresh limesThis is the next lineApparently that rhymes with pine
gollark: My rhymes are strangeBut I'm going to rhyme with orængeI'm using a rhyming dictionaryOnline, not from the libraryTechnically it's an API for word association queriesThere exists a thing known as a "geometric series"
gollark: I am going to rip you apartSimilarly to shredded cheeseBy deploying a railgunWhich shoots bees
gollark: I made time parsing workthough it has a weird quirkbecause it turns out that general parsing of times is quite a hard problem, so I just had it parse one hardcoded date format, parse time *deltas* using a nice regex, and use some random library for the rest.

References

  1. "Definition of Safaera". que-quiere-decir.com. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  2. Suarez, Gary (February 29, 2020). "Bad Bunny Drops New Album YHLQMDLG". Forbes. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  3. "Top 100 Canciones: Semana 14". Productores de Música de España. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  4. "Jowell Confiesa Que Bad Bunny Escribió Safaera Completa y Narra Su Trayectoria". April 18, 2020. Retrieved April 23, 2020 via YouTube. From minute 52.
  5. Thompson, Desire (March 18, 2020). "Bad Bunny's "Safaera" Inspires Hilarious #AbuelaChallenge". Vibe. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  6. Herrera, Isabelia (March 4, 2020). "Bad Bunny: "Safaera" [ft. Jowell & Randy and Ñengo Flow]". Pitchfork. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  7. Flores, Griselda (March 18, 2020). "6 Essential Tracks on Bad Bunny's YHLQMDLG: Editors' Picks". Billboard. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  8. Exposito, Suzy (March 2, 2020). "Bad Bunny Demands the World Crossover to Him on YHLQMDLG". Rolling Stone. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  9. https://www.elnuevodia.com/entretenimiento/musica/nota/spotifyretiradesuslistaseltemasafaeradebadbunny-2568747/
  10. https://www.telehit.com/urbano/safaera-regreso-spotify-por-que-la-quitaron-bad-bunny
  11. "Bad Bunny – Chart History (Argentina Hot 100)" Billboard Argentina Hot 100 Singles for Bad Bunny. Retrieved April 22, 2020.
  12. "Bad Bunny Chart History (Hot 100)". Billboard. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  13. "Bad Bunny Chart History (Hot Latin Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  14. "Top 100 Songs". Rolling Stone. March 10, 2020. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  15. "Spanish single certifications – Bad Bunny / Jowell / Randy / Ñengo Flow – Safaera". El portal de Música. Productores de Música de España. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.