

- Invasion of Privacy · 2018
- Mi Gente (F4st, Velza & Loudness Remix) - Single · 2017
- 7 · 2018
- TRANSLATION · 2019
- X (Spanglish Version) - Single · 2018
- Loco Contigo (feat. Tyga) - Single · 2019
- Vibras · 2017
- In Da Getto - Single · 2021
- I Can't Get Enough - Single · 2019
- ФОРСАЖ 8: The Album · 2017
- Familiar - Single · 2018
- UN DIA (ONE DAY) - Single · 2020
- JOSE · 2021
Albums
- 2020
- 2019
- 2018
- 2013
- 2012
Artist Playlists
- Steamy club smashes from Colombia's suave reggaetón ambassador.
- Reggaetón clips with the energy of a full-on party.
- J Balvin talks through each of the 10 colour-coded tracks on the album.
- “I hope this music brings the party to you either way.”
- “The internet has helped out a lot through this moment. It’s time to create.”
- The Colombian megastar honours his heroes with his favourite Metallica tracks.
Live Albums
- 2017
Compilations
- 2017
- 2016
- 2014
- Major Lazer
More To Hear
- Hanuman features highlights from J Balvin’s First Listen and more.
- KAROL G walks us through the making of her LP 'KG0516'.
- Ebro highlights the best international artists of 2020.
- The reggaeton artist highlights his career in 2020.
- Rauw Alejandro On "De Cora <3" plus Billie Eilish.
- Balvin and designer Milkman go back to the origins of reggaeton.
- They chat "UN DIA (ONE DAY)" plus Aaron Dessner on 'folklore.'
More To See
About J Balvin
In an interview with Apple Music about his 2020 album Colores, J Balvin told a story about a guy who came up to him one day on the treadmill. He’d been watching Balvin, he said. Watching his influence, his impact, his good work. He felt inspired by him, quit drugs and gave his dreams another look. Fame was nice, but this, Balvin said, was the point. “When you throw in good energy, good vibes, people just start catching up to it.” More than a musician, Balvin has become a kind of role model, the emblem of Latino culture’s evolution—like hip-hop in the '80s—from a specialty market into a dominant force in mainstream pop. The guy at the gym wasn’t just seeing a star; he was seeing something he maybe thought couldn’t exist years before. Born José Álvaro Osorio Balvín in Medellín, Colombia, in 1985, Balvin grew up listening to rock music before falling in love with Daddy Yankee and reggaetón. He moved to the States as a teenager, first for a language exchange program in Oklahoma, then to New York City, before heading back to Colombia to start making music—a grassroots, home-first approach that Balvin has sustained throughout his career. Balvin’s biggest songs—from early singles like “6 AM” and “Ay Vamos” to 2017’s massive “Mi Gente” and the ROSALÍA collaboration “Con Altura”—are, in a sense, crossover Latin tracks, but not because they’re trying to cross over. If anything, Balvin, along with musicians like his collaborator Bad Bunny, represents a generation of Latino artists having global impact without having to cater to mainstream pop audiences—an approach that, ironically, helped reveal a changing understanding of who that mainstream audience actually is. In other words, they didn’t break into the conversation, they brought the conversation to them. And they’re having it in Spanish.
- HOMETOWN
- Medellin, Colombia
- BORN
- 7 мая 1985 г.