Latin & Reggaeton Grooves

Reggaeton, Latin trap, salsa, bachata and Latin electronic DJ videos. Watch live sets from Latin music DJs and book them directly for events.

Latin and reggaeton DJ videos cover one of the most globally dominant sound families in modern music. This category collects video content from DJs specialising in reggaeton, Latin trap, dembow, moombahton, salsa, bachata, merengue, cumbia and Latin electronic hybrids.

Latin music has crossed over from regional to global mainstream — reggaeton is now one of the most-streamed genres worldwide and Latin trap dominates chart activity in both Spanish- and English-speaking markets. This category surfaces DJs who actually work these sounds, not generic top-40 selectors adding a Bad Bunny track.

Every video is attached to the DJ's Musiconect profile with contact, calendar and booking info. For event planners, this matters because Latin music expertise is genre-specific: a great reggaeton DJ is not necessarily a great salsa DJ, and vice versa. Watch full sets to shortlist accurately, then book directly through the same page.

The category spans the full Latin dancefloor spectrum — old-school reggaeton and classic salsa/bachata for weddings and cultural events, current Latin trap and dembow for club nights, moombahton and Latin house for open-format and festival contexts. Search by DJ or sub-genre to narrow down.

Frequently asked questions about Latin & Reggaeton

What BPM is reggaeton?

Modern reggaeton typically sits at 90–100 BPM. Classic old-school reggaeton lives around 88–95 BPM; Latin trap runs 70–90 BPM; moombahton pushes 108–110 BPM.

Can I book a Latin DJ for a wedding or event?

Yes — Latin DJs on Musiconect take weddings, quinceañeras, cultural events, brand activations, festival stages and private parties. Contact directly through the DJ profile linked to each video.

What is the difference between reggaeton and Latin trap?

Reggaeton is faster (90–100 BPM) with the signature dembow rhythm; Latin trap is slower (70–90 BPM), built on hip-hop trap drum patterns with Spanish-language rap. Many DJs play both.

Do I need a Spanish-speaking DJ?

Not necessarily — many top Latin DJs work internationally regardless of the crowd's primary language. Language matters most for MC work or wedding events where a bilingual DJ can engage guests directly.

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