Get To Know Camilo Echeverry, Reggaeton's Secret Pop Weapon

Get To Know Camilo Echeverry, Reggaeton's Secret Pop Weapon




By Lucas Villa


Even as one of last year's biggest Latin music hits, Becky G and Natti Natasha’s "Sin Pijama" ("Without Pajamas" in English language, tore up the global charts, hitting No. 1 in four Spanish-speaking countries and going 13 times platinum in the U.S., One of its writers was without a recording contract. Although that was 2018. Camilo Echeverry, who goes solely goes by Camilo, is currently making moves from hit-making songwriter to artist in his own right: He revealed on February 4 that he signed with Sony Music Latin. Backstage at the Fuego Music Festival in Miami on February 24, the 24-year-old emerging artist was gracious about his major career shift.


"I feel very happy,” Echeverry mentioned in Spanish. “The truth is that it's been a very long process to get to this moment."


At a Florida efficiency last November, as soon as Echeverry sang his rising hit "Desconocidos" with frequent collaborators and Venezuelan-born duo Mau y Ricky, Ricky Montaner had to playfully push Echeverry to the face of the stage to sing his part. The title, which translates to "Strangers" in English, recently charted at No. 31 on Billboard's Hot Latin Songs chart. This time around, with a surprise appearance while in Mau y Ricky's headlining set in Miami, Camilo strutted in with swagger and raised his mic to the fans who were singing along in the crowd.


Before getting "Desconocidos" out with Mau y Ricky and Colombian reggaetonero, or reggaeton music artist, Manuel Turizo, and then signing his deal, Echeverry's notoriety in the Latin music scene was mostly in back of the scenes. Echeverry was place on Earth in Medellín, Colombia, the hometown of Latin superstars J Balvin and Maluma. Soon after winning a Colombian spin-off of The X-Factor in 2007 as a teenager, his star blown up and his debut single, “Regálame Tu Corazón,” or “Give Me Your Heart,” shot to No. 1 locally and was certified gold in much less than two months.


But immediately after releasing his second album, 2010's Tráfico de Sentimientos (Traffic of Feelings), he pulled his music career over to the side of the road and moved away from the spotlight. In a video Echeverry posted last year called “Back to the Game,” he said, “For a long time I wanted to hide backstage or under the stage.” Having been wrung out by the pop machine, Echeverry determined to take some time off rather than stubbornly push forward.


Echeverry's name began to appear outdoors of Colombia at the starting of last year. The once clean-cut teen idol re-emerged as a scruffy, Bohemian-styled twentysomething armed with a handlebar mustache you may only find in a Urban Outfitters. He was right now a full-time songwriter working with all your favorites in the Latin music circuit: Mexican-American singer Becky G, reggaetoneras Natti Natasha and Karol G, Colombian heartthrob Sebastián Yatra, Brazilian aesthetics Anitta, Latin pop star Prince Royce, and Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny.


"When you write for someone else, you're being an actor," Echeverry mentioned. "The feeling is the feeling of another." It’s a feeling he understands well. “Sin Pijama” — on which he shares a writing credit with Mau y Ricky, Daddy Yankee, and others — is about having a sexy sleepover with weed and without clothes. It hit No. 70 on Billboard's all-genre Hot 100 chart last year. Currently, the music video sits at 1.3 billion views on YouTube.


Another hit Echeverry scored as a songwriter was Mau y Ricky and Yatra's "Ya No Tiene Novio," which he wrote with the duo. The title translates to "Don't Have a Boyfriend Anymore" — the music video, where they steal each other's girlfriends, has amassed over 517 million views on YouTube. With Royce, Echeverry wrote "El Clavo" (or "The Nail" in English language) and on that one, the Dominican-American artist sings about scooping up a women who deserves better.


whenever you write for yourself, it's 100 percent all your essence," Echeverry mentioned. The perfect example of Camilo's own essence is on "Desconocidos" with Mau y Ricky and Turizo. Backed by a breezy ukulele courtesy of Turizo's older brother, Julian, and reggaeton beats, Echeverry sings in Spanish about being the man of your dreams. Those words feel real with his distinctly delicate vocals. In a Latin music scene currently dominated by urban music, Echeverry is finding his footing in a novel sound, one of the singer-songwriter. With “Desconocidos,” he's beginning off on the correct foot: The music video has crossed over 250 million views.


Outdoors of music, Echeverry uploads pretty videos on YouTube with his fiancée Evaluna Montaner, the sister of Mau y Ricky, and his Instagram feed is like a Latinx Hallmark card filled with positive messages of hope: "AMAR ES MI REVOLUCIÓN," or "LOVE IS MY REVOLUTION," reads his IG bio. “[Love] is the feeling of everything I write and it's like my driving force for everything," he adds.


Echeverry brought these good vibes to the Venezuela Aid Live concert in Cúcuta, Colombia on February 22. "It was a concert that moved me a lot," he mentioned. "It was not easy, however so several folks are suffering. I felt happy to be a segment of raising global awareness to show what is happening in Venezuela is a tremendous injustice." He sang "Desconocidos" with Mau y Ricky again. Onstage, he donned pants carrying a message in Spanish that translated to "the truth will set you free."


As Echeverry explained, it was easy to be able to see why he could be so full of positivity: "I feel rather happy because this is the starting of something most crucial for my career."









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