miscegenation, language, traditions and above all, the fusion of sounds that go on to become distinguished music in Latino culture.
It is common to find in the Tropics sounds of the region, sounds that convey the atmosphere where the lyrics and melody of the song was conceived.
It is characteristic of Puerto Rico Reggaeton, a series of sounds with a catchy rhythm that makes you dance and show how natural it is in you and on the other hand, typical of Colombia is the Vallenato, a melancholy sound, yet cheerful .
Currently, it is very popular mix of sounds in each region. Especially in Latin America and Spanish-speaking countries, although it seems that after Pop and Reggaeton there had arisen any gender.
It is important to remember that not only sounds arise in a region and become popular throughout the world, but these sounds are a true reflection of society.
Musical genres show us as a society, and in today's society dominated globalized culture, in which, through the internet is possible for each song got any ricón the planet regardless of language, and to achieve an acceptance although the sound goes against the culture that dominates in that territory.
From a simpler view, it is common and completely normal fusion of sounds (Rock with Pop Ballad with Hip Hop //) or convert a song from one genre to another or listen to a different original language and accept those versions as their own and part of the soundtrack of the life of each.
Such is the case sounds like Merengueton and Vallenaton.
Themselves funsion two sounds, the first Merengue and Reggaeton, and the case of "La Bicicleta" interpreted "by Carlos Vives and Shakira (both Colombian artists with a long musical and known experience in Latin America and other regions of the world ) they give us a song with the presence of instruments of Vallenato and Reggaeton some, that adquiren automatically become popular Pop song name.
And the genre goes on to become a musical reference to geographically locate the artist and the sound where it arises.
I am proud Venezuelan, but with this song I can not help but tell my Colombian brothers Long live Colombia! Uesguaaaa!