Valerie Morales

Valerie Morales (born January 18, 1976), also known simply as Valerie or Valeria, is a Puerto Rican singer-songwriter and radio and television personality, who has worked with a variety of musical performers including Daddy Yankee, Eddie Dee, and Hector & Tito, among others.[1] She was born and raised in Fajardo, Puerto Rico. Morales began her acting career in 2001 and her musical career in 2003.

Valerie Morales
Also known asValerie, Valeria
Born (1976-01-18) January 18, 1976
Fajardo, Puerto Rico
OriginSan Juan, Puerto Rico
GenresReggaetón, salsa, merengue
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, actress
Years active2001—present
LabelsFlow Music
Associated actsDaddy Yankee, Eddie Dee, K-Mil, Noriega

Musical career

2001–2002: Career beginnings

In 2001, Morales began appearing in various sketches for comedies on Puerto Rican television. They were produced by Tony Mojena Television, an affiliate of Telemundo in Puerto Rico. Among the programs were "El Gran Bejuco", "Susa y Epifanio", and "Dame un Break".[2] Morales, wanting to assist some of her friends find jobs in television, eventually started a talent agency. She later began appearing in videos for reggaetón artists, when the women that were originally picked could not be there. These included Trebol Clan and Ranking Stone, among others.[3] She has worked with La X 100.7 FM, Univision Radio in New York and WHKQ ("KQ103") in Orlando. She is currently working for CBS Radio.[4]

2003–2005: Flow Music contract and "Te Exitare"

While going to college full-time, Morales would sing in locales where she was the only female. In 2003, she met with long-time friend Noriega. After listening to a song performed by Nelly and Kelly Rowland ("Dilemma"), Morales "ended up singing lyrics she wrote to a similar melody" of the song.[3] She then signed a contract with the record label Flow Music, after DJ Nelson offered her an opportunity to record as a reggaetón artist under his Flow Music Label. That year, she recorded her first big hit "Te Exitaré",[2] which charted on the Billboard Tropical Songs chart, peaking at number thirty-five.[5]

The following year, she particated in The Noise Biografía with "Lo Que Quiero Es Bailar". Morales was the back-up singer for duo Wisin & Yandel's first three concerts also playing Yandel's girlfriend in the movie Mi Vida. Her 2004 single "Ven y Baila" was featured on Noriega's Contra La Corriente (2004).[2] Eddie Dee then called Morales, and told her he wanted her to sing on a song from him. This was turned into "Donde Hubo Fuego" with Daddy Yankee, which appeared on the former's 2004 album 12 Discípulos.[3]

2006–present: Mi Flow and TV personality

Her debut studio album Mi Flow was released in 2007 under the Flow Music Label, distributed by Universal Music Latino.[6][7] The album featured "commercial" material, "full of reggaetón ballads" and "clean lyrics" that "women can relate to".[3] Mi Flow did not include "tiraeras (beef between two or more artists) associated with the Reggaetón genre".[3] It featured production by DJ Memo and Sosa among others signed to Flow Music and collaborations with K-Mill, Cidelis and Las Guanabanas.[3] An editor for Allmusic claimed the album to be "as crammed with hot beats and irresistible tunes as you'd expect from such a multi-faceted talent."[8] In 2008, she was hired by Telemundo Studios Miami to record "Doble Vida" the theme song for the telenovela El Rostro de Analía on Telemundo.[4] Since 2012, Morales has been the lead on-air personality for 92.5 Maxima in Tampa, Florida.[4]

gollark: How do you know I haven't memorized all algorithms ever?
gollark: Macron is a pure function from () to (), yes.
gollark: Sure it would. Macron is meant to be very extensible and flexible.
gollark: They're basically the same language. Python is very metaprogramming.
gollark: You should use it for Macron.

References

  1. "Mi Flow — Valerie: Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards: Allmusic". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  2. "Valerie Biography — Reggaetonline". Reggaetonline. Pokus Web Solutions. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  3. Butler, Quintee. "Valerie: One of the best voices behind Reggaetón". Reggaetonline. Pokus Web Solutions. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  4. "Valerie Morales Biography". Valerie Morales. Archived from the original on September 15, 2013. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  5. "Tropical Airplay: December 27, 2003 — Billboard Chart Archive". Billboard. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  6. "Amazon.com: Mi Flow: Valerie: MP3 Downloads". Amazon. Amazon.com, Inc. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  7. "iTunes — Music — Mi Flow by Valerie". iTunes Store. Apple Inc. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  8. "Mi Flow – Valerie: Songs, Reviews, Credits: Allmusic". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved May 3, 2015.
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