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{{short description|Puerto Rican hip-hop band}}
{{Infobox musical artist <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject Musicians -->
{{for|their eponymous debut album|Calle 13 (album){{!}}''Calle 13'' (album)}}
| Name = Calle 13
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2022}}
| Img = Residentecalle13.png
{{Infobox musical artist
| Img_capt = Lead singer Residente Calle 13
| Img_size = <!-- Only for images narrower than 220 pixels -->
| name = Calle 13
| Landscape =
| image = Calle 13 en Venezuela.jpg
| image_size = <!-- Only for images narrower than 220 pixels -->
| Background = group_or_band
| Alias =
| landscape = yes
| caption = Calle 13 performing in Venezuela
| Origin = [[Image:Flag of Puerto Rico.svg|25px|Puerto Rican flag]] [[Puerto Rico]]
| alias =
| Genre = [[Reggaeton]], [[Urban culture|Urban]], [[Latin Rap]]
| Years_active =
| origin = [[Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico]]
| Label =
| genre = {{flatlist|
* [[Alternative hip-hop]]
| Associated_acts =
* [[world music|world]]
| URL = [http://www.lacalle13.com/ LaCalle13.com]
* [[conscious hip-hop]]
| Current_members = René Pérez, a.k.a. Residente<br>Eduardo Cabra, a.k.a. Visitante
* [[rap rock]]
| Past_members =
* [[indie rock]]
* [[reggaeton]] (early)
}}
| years_active = 2004–2015 (hiatus)
| label = {{flatlist|
* El Abismo<ref name=MVPH/>
* [[White Lion Records|White Lion]]
* [[Sony Music|Sony]]
}}
| associated_acts =
| current_members = * [[Residente]]
* [[Visitante]]
* [[iLe]]
| past_members =
}}
}}
'''Calle 13''' is a three-time [[Latin Grammy Award]]-winning and [[Grammy Award]]-nominated [[Puerto Rican]] [[hip hop]] and alternative-[[reggaeton]] duo formed by step-brothers who call themselves '''Residente''' (lead singer, writer) and '''Visitante''' (keyboards, vocals, writer, beat producer). Their sister Ileana (aka '''PG-13''') has contributed the female vocals to some of their songs, and so has Residente's mother, Puerto Rican actress [[Flor Joglar de Gracia]] (on the single ''"[[Tango del Pecado]]"'')


'''Calle 13''' is a Puerto Rican [[alternative hip-hop]] band formed by stepbrothers [[Residente]] (lead vocalist, songwriter) and [[Visitante]] ([[multi-instrumentalist]], vocalist, beat [[record producer|producer]]), along with their half-sister [[iLe]], also known as PG-13 (backing vocals).
==Band History==
===Early Years===
Residente and Visitante come from a family with strong ties to the Puerto Rican arts community. Residente's mother, Flor Joglar, was an actress for ''"Teatro del Sesenta"'', a renowned local acting troupe; their mutual father is a lawyer, but at one time was a painter.{{Fact|date=April 2007}}


Pérez and Cabra first were discovered by Elias De Leon. They were subsequently given a record deal with [[White Lion Records]] after leaving a demo with A&R Director Carlos "Karly" Rosario. After the song "[[Querido FBI]]" was released, the group gained attention in Puerto Rico. In 2005, Calle 13 released its [[Calle 13 (album)|eponymously titled debut album]], which included the singles "Se Vale Tó-Tó" and "[[Atrévete-te-te|¡Atrévete-te-te!]]" and reached number 6 on the ''[[Billboard charts|Billboard]]'' [[Top Latin Albums]] chart. In 2007, the group released its second album, ''[[Residente o Visitante]]'', which experimented with a wide variety of genres and reached number 1 on the Top Latin Albums chart. The album helped the group gain success throughout Latin America and win three Latin Grammys. The group released its third album, ''[[Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo]]'', in 2008, which won Album of the Year at the [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2009|2009 Latin Grammy Awards]]. Calle 13 released ''[[Entren Los Que Quieran]]'' in November 2010 and its latest album, ''[[Multi Viral]]'', on March 1, 2014.
When they were children, Eduardo would visit his brother at the Calle 13 (13th. Street) of the El Conquistador subsection of [[Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico]] every week. The pair named themselves ''Calle 13'' after the street where their house sits in.<ref name="CALLE">[http://www.latinrapper.com/calle_13_interview.html Latin Hip Hop Interview - "Calle 13 Cross Spanish Rap's Musical Borders"]</ref>


Calle 13 is noted for its eclectic musical style, often using unconventional instrumentation in its music, which distances the group from the [[reggaeton]] genre. The band is also known for its satirical lyrics as well as social commentary about Latin American issues and culture. The stepbrothers are strong supporters of the [[Puerto Rican independence movement]], a stance that has generated controversy.<ref name="New York Times">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/11/arts/music/11calle.html|title=Continuing Days of Independence for Calle 13|last=Rohter|first=Larry|date=April 18, 2010|work=[[The New York Times]]|access-date=April 7, 2009}}</ref> For their work, the group has won twenty-one [[Latin Grammy Award]]s, holding the record for the most Latin Grammy wins. They have also won three [[Grammy Awards]].
Residente originally studied to be an accountant, and his brother finished a computer science degree. However, neither of them felt happy with their career choices. An art course prompted Residente to pursue a career as a [[multimedia]] designer, and Visitante became a full-time musician and producer. Besides this, Residente was a die-hard fan of what was then called "underground rap" in Puerto Rico, and started earning a reputation as a lyricist. Meanwhile, Visitante participated in a [[rock music|rock]] group called '''Bayanga''' and a [[Brazilian]] [[batucada]] group.<ref name="NIGHT">[http://www.latina.com/latina/entertainment/entertainment.jsp?genre=music&article=nightoutcalle13 Latina.com Interview - "A Night Out with Calle 13" by Nuria Net]</ref>


== History==
After Residente finished studying in [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] and returned to Puerto Rico, both of them started working in their music. They claim they initially did it as a joke, but they still managed to get some of their songs heard around.<ref name="NIGHT">[http://www.latina.com/latina/entertainment/entertainment.jsp?genre=music&article=nightoutcalle13 Latina.com Interview - "A Night Out with Calle 13" by Nuria Net]</ref>


===The First Album===
===2004–2005: early years===
Residente and Visitante met when they were both two years old, when Residente's mother married Visitante's father.<ref name=Allmusic>{{cite web|url=http://allmusic.com/artist/calle-13-p747326/biography|title=Calle 13 Biography|last=Birchmeier|first=Jason|access-date=February 2, 2011|work=Allmusic}}</ref> The family developed strong ties to the Puerto Rican arts community; Residente's mother, Flor Joglar de Gracia, was an actress in Teatro del Sesenta, a local acting troupe, while Visitante's father (who later became Residente's stepfather) is currently a lawyer, but at one time was a musician.<ref name="New York Times"/> The duo asserts that they lived a relatively comfortable lifestyle growing up, as Residente places himself in a group of Puerto Ricans who are "too poor to be rich and too rich to be poor."<ref name="Sin Mapa">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2009-aug-02-ca-calle2-story.html|title=Calle 13, in search of the real Latin America|last=Morales|first=Ed|date=August 2, 2009|access-date=February 7, 2011|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]}}</ref> Although their parents later divorced, the stepbrothers remained close.<ref name="Allmusic"/> When they were children, Visitante would visit his brother at the Calle 13 (13th Street) of the El Conquistador subsection of [[Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico]], every week. Since the subsection is a gated community, visitors were routinely asked "¿Residente o visitante?" ("Resident or visitor?") by a security guard when approaching the community's main gate.<ref name="New York Times"/> Therefore, Visitante would identify himself as a visitor, while Residente would have to insist that he was a resident to clear the gate.<ref name="Allmusic"/> The pair named themselves Calle 13 after the street their family's house was on.<ref name="CALLE">[http://www.latinrapper.com/calle_13_interview.html Latin Hip Hop Interview - "Calle 13 Cross Spanish Rap's Musical Borders"]</ref> Before living there, they lived at Calle 11.<ref name=emequis>{{cite web|last1=Acuña|first1=Carlos|title=Me Llaman el Incongruente|url=http://www.m-x.com.mx/2014-04-20/calle-13-me-llaman-el-incongruente/|website=Emeequis|access-date=October 20, 2014|language=es|date=April 20, 2014|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141018231703/http://www.m-x.com.mx/2014-04-20/calle-13-me-llaman-el-incongruente/|archive-date=October 18, 2014}}</ref>
At one time, Residente and Visitante sent a [[demo tape]] to [[White Lion Records]] and they offered them a record deal.<ref name="NIGHT">[http://www.latina.com/latina/entertainment/entertainment.jsp?genre=music&article=nightoutcalle13 Latina.com Interview - "A Night Out with Calle 13" by Nuria Net]</ref> While their album was being mixed, [[Filiberto Ojeda Ríos]], leader of the Puerto Rican Revolutionary Group (known as [[Boricua Popular Army|Los Macheteros]]), was killed in the middle of a botched (some argue intentional) ambush-killing by the [[Federal Bureau of Investigations|FBI]] that were trying to arrest him. Details about this raid still remain unclear.


Residente originally studied to be an accountant, and Visitante finished a computer science degree. An art course prompted Residente to pursue a career as a [[multimedia]] designer, and Visitante became a full-time musician and producer. Residente states that his degree in design has influenced his musical style: "What I used to do with my visual art is the same thing I do now with my lyrics. My songs are descriptive, very visual."<ref name="New York Times"/> Besides this, Residente was a fan of what was then called "underground rap" in Puerto Rico, and started to earn a reputation as a lyricist (Residente says, with some embarrassment, that his moniker at the time was "El Déspota", or "The Despot"). Meanwhile, Visitante participated in Bayanga, a [[rock music|rock]] and Brazilian [[batucada]] group.<ref name="NIGHT">[http://www.latina.com/latina/entertainment/entertainment.jsp?genre=music&article=nightoutcalle13 Latina.com Interview - "A Night Out with Calle 13" by Nuria Net] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928195600/http://www.latina.com/latina/entertainment/entertainment.jsp?genre=music&article=nightoutcalle13 |date=September 28, 2007 }}</ref> After Residente finished studying in [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] at the [[Savannah College of Art and Design]] and earned a master of fine arts in animation, illustration, sequential art and film, he returned to Puerto Rico.<ref name="New York Times"/> Soon after, both of them started working on their music. They claim they initially did it as a joke, but they still managed to get some of their songs heard throughout Puerto Rico.<ref name="NIGHT"/> They began recording music together in 2004, with the idea of hosting their work on a website, beginning with two demos ("La Tripleta" and "La Aguacatona").<ref name="Allmusic"/> Within a year, the duo began looking for a record label to distribute their music commercially. They decided to pursue a deal at [[White Lion Records]], because [[Tego Calderón]] was on the label, whom the two admired.<ref name="Allmusic"/>
Angered by the FBI's action, Residente wrote a song about what happened and asked his record label to allow the duo to release the controversial single titled "[[Querido FBI]]" ("Dear FBI" <ref name="FBI">[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMYJvwwlg64 YouTube.com Link of the Video "Querido FBI"]</ref>), written, produced and released about thirty hours after Ojeda's killing, to the public via the Internet. The song started what would be the band's rise to local fame.


===2005–2006: "Querido FBI" and ''Calle 13''===
Soon after this, the duo rose to fame in 2005 with two back-to-back hits on Puerto Rican radio stations, first one being "Se Vale Tó-Tó" and "[[Atrevete-te-te!]]", both of them included later on their [[Calle 13 (album)|eponymously titled debut album]].
While their first album was being mixed, [[Filiberto Ojeda Ríos]], leader of the Puerto Rican revolutionary group known as [[Boricua Popular Army|Los Macheteros]], was killed in the course of arrest by the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation|FBI]].


Angered by the FBI's action, Residente wrote a song protesting against what had happened to Ojeda and asked his record label to allow the group to release it on the Internet through [[viral marketing]] through [[Indymedia]] Puerto Rico, an alternative news website.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tuftsdaily.com/arts/crisper-and-more-mature-calle-13-returns-with-politically-charged-album-entren-los-que-quieran-1.2422669 |title=Crisper and more mature, Calle 13 returns with politically−charged album, 'Entren Los Que Quieran' |last=MacEwen |first=Melissa |date=December 6, 2010 |work=The Tufts Daily |access-date=December 21, 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120304222140/http://www.tuftsdaily.com/arts/crisper-and-more-mature-calle-13-returns-with-politically-charged-album-entren-los-que-quieran-1.2422669 |archive-date=March 4, 2012 }}</ref>
After this rise to fame, the duo was sought by other reggaeton artists, and they collaborated with artists such as [[Voltio]] in the song "Ojalai" (also known as "Chulin Culin Chunfly", whose name is a minor variation of a song written by Mexican comedy writer [[Roberto Gómez Bolaños]], of whose comedic characters Residente is a fan){{Fact|date=April 2007}}, and with the [[Three 6 Mafia]] in the remix, singing or co-writing songs. At the end of [[2005]], they finally released their album, which received great critical praise and has been hailed as a cornerstone in Puerto Rico's musical history.


Public controversy about the song's lyrics ensured immediate attention from mainstream media in Puerto Rico. The song, according to critics, "redefined what a reggaeton vocalist's relationship to Puerto Rico should be."<ref>Frances Negrón-Muntaner and Raquel Z. Rivera, "Reggaeton Nation" (December 17, 2007)</ref>
In 2006 the duo kept on working as they broke into a wider-music scene with at least three more smash hits that were played throughout Puerto Rico and U.S. Urban music radio and television stations, including the [[Colombian]] [[cumbia]]-style song "Atrevete-te-Te!", "Japón" (Japan), and "Suave" (Soft/Slow). The group also had their first massive-venue concert on [[May 6]], [[2006]] at the [[Jose Miguel Agrelot Coliseum]] in [[San Juan, Puerto Rico|San Juan]]. They also toured Central and South America, filming a video for their song "La Jirafa" in [[Peru]], playing "Atrévete-te-te" before an ''ecola de [[samba]]'' in Venezuelan television, and also visiting, among others, [[Guatemala]], [[Chile]], [[Honduras]] and [[Colombia]].


[[File:Calle13R.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Visitante during Calle 13's first concert in [[Managua]], [[Nicaragua]].]]
===Rise to International Fame===
Soon Calle 13 started collaborations with other artists, [[Nelly Furtado]] and [[Alejandro Sanz]] among them. Residente was also linked romantically with [[Denise Quiñones]], [[Miss Universe 2001]]<ref name="DENISE">[http://www.nydailynews.com/latino/2007/04/11/2007-04-11_down_n_dirty_south_america_way.html NY Daily News - "Down 'n' dirty, South America way"]</ref>. The apparent character mismatch between the two has fueled controversy in Puerto Rican media, and Quiñones parents have still refused to meet with Residente.<ref name="DENISE">[http://www.nydailynews.com/latino/2007/04/11/2007-04-11_down_n_dirty_south_america_way.html NY Daily News - "Down 'n' dirty, South America way"]</ref>


Soon after this, the duo rose to fame in 2005 with two back-to-back hits on Puerto Rican radio stations: "Se Vale Tó-Tó" and "[[Atrevete-te-te!]]" Both songs were later included on their [[Calle 13 (album)|eponymously titled debut album]], which was released on November 29, 2005.
On [[May 19]], [[2006]], the band celebrated their first international concert held in [[Panama City]] to a crowd of 5,000.
During the summer of 2006 Calle 13 was featured on [[MTV]]'s [[My Block : Puerto Rico]].


After this rise to fame, the duo was sought by other reggaetón artists, and they collaborated with artists such as [[Voltio]] in the song "Ojalai" (also known as "Chulin Culin Chunfly", whose name is a minor variation of a song written by Mexican comedy writer [[Roberto Gómez Bolaños]], of whose comedic characters Residente is a fan—by citing the name, Gómez Bolaños is legally a co-author of the song,<ref>[https://archive.today/20130118163838/http://repertoire.bmi.com/title.asp?blnWriter=True&blnPublisher=True&blnArtist=True&keyID=7851875&ShowNbr=0&ShowSeqNbr=0&querytype=WorkID BMI database record] for "Chulin Culin Fun Flai", accessed on June 25, 2012.</ref>) and with the [[Three 6 Mafia]] in the remix, singing or co-writing songs. At the end of 2005, they finally released their album, which received great critical praise.
On [[November 2]], [[2006]] the band won three [[Latin Grammys]] (''Best New Artist''; ''Best Urban Album''; and ''Best Short Version Video'', for the song ''Atrevete-te-Te!''.) They later filmed a video along [[Voltio]] for "Chulin, Culin, Chunflai", where Residente, dressed as a [[priest]] and later as [[Bruce Lee]], is given a severe beating by a gang.


In 2006 the duo kept on working as they broke into a wider-music scene with at least two more smash hits that were played throughout Puerto Rico and U.S. Urban music radio and television stations, including the songs "Japón" ("Japan"), and "Suave" ("Soft/Slow"). The group had their first massive-venue concert on May 6, 2006, at the [[José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum]] in [[San Juan, Puerto Rico|San Juan]]. They also toured Central and South America, playing "Atrévete-te-te" before an ''escola de [[samba]]'' in Venezuelan television, and also visiting, among others, Guatemala, Chile, Honduras and Colombia.{{Citation needed|date=October 2007}}
On [[April 24]], [[2007]], their most recent album [[Residente o Visitante]] was released. The songs on the album were recorded in [[Puerto Rico]] and in other nations throughout [[Latin America]] and the American Hemisphere. This is part of a conscious effort by Residente to stay in tune with the local reality of the countries they have visited, hoping to learn the musical cultures, local slang and street stories in the process.
<!--Residente consider's this album to be more dark than the first, but also more introspective and biographical. As part of the album, Calle 13 filmed the video for their first single off the album, ''"[[Tango del Pecado]]"'', on February 25, 2007. The video suggests a [[surrealism|surreal]] sequence where Residente and [[Denise Quiñones]] are married in a garden, with a [[barbed wire]] physically separating their families, [[Sunshine Logroño]] (considered by many the ''[[enfant terrible]]'' of Puerto Rican comedy) dressed as an [[archbishop]] to marry them, and various peculiar characters surrounding them. [[Gustavo Santaolalla]] intervened in the song's production.
-->


In light of the criticism directed towards the band, Calle 13 has become a cultural reference to be reckoned with in Puerto Rico. An example of this is the constant references made to the band and to Residente by satirical writer [[Fiquito Yunqué]] in the weekly pro-independence newspaper ''[[Claridad]]''. Yunqué's columns sometimes feature Calle 13 lyrics as their titles, and Yunqué even introduced the band onstage at one of their live performances in Puerto Rico.
==Members==
[[Image:ResidenteCalle13.jpg|right|thumb|Residente Calle 13]]
* '''Residente''' (born as '''René Pérez''' on [[February 23]], [[1978]] in [[Hato Rey]], [[Puerto Rico]]) is the lead singer. Despite his [[rebel]], [[slacker]] veneer, ''Residente'' has achieved a degree in arts and a Master of Fine Arts ([[MFA]]) in [[Computer Animation]] from [[Savannah College of Art and Design]] (SCAD) in [[Georgia (United States)|Georgia]]<ref name="CALLE">[http://www.latinrapper.com/calle_13_interview.html Latin Hip Hop Interview - "Calle 13 Cross Spanish Rap's Musical Borders"]</ref>. Pérez has also studied [[cinematography]] and photography, and uses his experience to assist with the treatments and direction of all Calle 13 music videos. He chose the name ''Residente'' because that's how he had to identify himself ("resident") to the security guard at the access control point at his home in [[Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico]], something he considered a minor annoyance. He bears eight [[tattoos]] on his arms, chest and neck. Among them the names of his siblings, a portrait of his mother, the word "Acuarela" (watercolor), and paintings by [[Basquiat]], [[Matisse]] and the puertorrican artist [[Raven Dranat Díaz Calderón]] {{Fact|date=April 2007}}. He also has several [[piercings]], and his head is almost always partially shaven or decorated to display elaborate designs.


Acceptance of Calle 13's music even influenced the former [[Governor of Puerto Rico]], [[Aníbal Acevedo Vilá]] who, in December 2005, admitted to listening to Calle 13 because his son had copied some of their songs to his [[iPod]]. Acevedo claimed that "songs such as Calle 13's were eye openers" to him. As a result, since the country had a chronic problem of people being unknowingly injured or killed by stray bullets fired to the air on [[New Year's Eve]], Acevedo felt compelled to invite the duo to [[La Fortaleza]] and to have them record a song against shootings bullets in the air as a way of celebrating the holiday.<ref name="GOV">{{Cite web |url=http://www.zonai.com/noticia_mainm.asp?ZONAI:81318&pos=m&title=ESPECTACULOS&catid=6 |title=Zonai.com Article about Calle 13 and the Governor of Puerto Rico "Residente Calle 13 en campaña contra las balas" |access-date=April 24, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928055814/http://www.zonai.com/noticia_mainm.asp?ZONAI%3A81318&pos=m&title=ESPECTACULOS&catid=6 |archive-date=September 28, 2007 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
* '''Visitante''' (born as '''Eduardo José Cabra Martínez''' on [[September 10]], [[1978]] in [[Santurce]], [[Puerto Rico]]) is the pianist and vocalist. He also has a degree in arts and paints regularly. He chose the name ''Visitante'' because that's how he had to identify ("visitor") whenever he went to visit his half-brother, René, at his home in [[Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico]] (see above.) He has fewer tattoos and piercings than René, and typically has long hair and a [[beard]].


The single, "Ley De Gravedad" (Law of Gravity) was released as part of a public-service campaign for that matter. Some political adversaries of Acevedo dismissed this as a trick to ingratiate himself with Puerto Rican youth and pro-independence advocates, and was criticized by the local press due to the fact that an artist who seemingly promoted violence with their "Querido FBI" song was now supposed to be a [[role model]] for anti-violence. However, the campaign was thought to be effective in reducing the injured, from twelve (and one death) the previous year, to three the year the campaign was run, though many members of the artistic community contributed to this effort in separate campaigns.<ref name="BALAS">{{cite web|url=https://www.prpop.org/noticias/ene06/reggaeton_ene04.shtml|title=Creatividad y talento en función cierre de 'Teatro en Movimiento'|work=Fundación Nacional para la Cultura Popular - San Juan, Puerto Rico|access-date=November 20, 2015}}</ref>
==Quotes==


===2007: ''Residente o Visitante''===
*"''[a] glimpse of Residente Calle 13, an art school graduate who has become the island’s first intellectual-styled reggaetón star. He wears tattoos of [[Jean-Michel Basquiat]], [[Henri Matisse|Matisse]], and Raven Dranat Díaz Calderón on his arms''." -[[The New York Times]], Monday, October 29, 2006.
{{Listen
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|description=The first single from ''[[Residente o Visitante]]'', "Tango del Pecado", mixes the [[Tango music|tango]] and [[reggaeton]] music genres.<ref name="Down'n'dirty">{{cite news|url=http://www.nydailynews.com/latino/2007/04/11/2007-04-11_down_n_dirty_south_america_way.html|title=Down 'n' dirty, South America way|date=April 18, 2007|access-date=August 26, 2011|work=[[NY Daily News]]|publisher=[[Mortimer Zuckerman]]|last=Diaz|first=Margarita}}</ref> The song features Argentinean producer [[Gustavo Santaolalla]] and lyrically focuses on Residente's controversial relationship with former Miss Universe [[Denise Quiñones]].<ref name="Expands">{{cite news|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/2007/06/07/calle-13-expands-with-tango-and-hip-hop/|title=Calle 13 expands with tango and hip-hop|last=Burr|first=Ramiro|work=[[Chicago Tribune]]|publisher=Tribune Company|date=June 7, 2007|access-date=October 3, 2011}}</ref><ref name="The Ugly">{{cite web|url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=106476931|title=Calle 13 Invites Fans To Embrace The Ugly|last=Rivera|first=Enrique|publisher=[[National Public Radio]]|access-date=March 4, 2012}}</ref>
|format=[[Ogg]]
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As the duo has risen to fame, other international artists of various genres have sought them. In 2006 and 2007, they recorded songs with Canadian [[Nelly Furtado]] and Spanish [[Alejandro Sanz]]. In their recent album, they feature contributions with such diverse groups like [[Orishas (band)|Orishas]] (a [[Hip hop music|hip hop]] group whose members had emigrated from Cuba), Mexican [[Café Tacuba]], Argentine Vicentico (from [[Los Fabulosos Cadillacs]]), and [[La Mala Rodríguez]] (from Spain), among others. On May 19, 2006, the band celebrated their first international concert, held in [[Panama City]] to a crowd of 5,000. During the summer of 2006 Calle 13 was featured on [[MTV]]'s ''My Block: Puerto Rico''. From September 15 – October 31 ''Calle'' 13 was ''Artist Speaking Tr3s'' on [[MTV Tr3s]].

On November 2, 2006, the band won three [[Latin Grammys]] (Best New Artist; Best Urban Album; and Best Short Version Video, for the song "Atrévete-te-te"). They later filmed a video along with [[Voltio]] for "Chulín Culín Chunfly", where Residente, dressed as a priest and later as [[Bruce Lee]], is given a severe beating by a gang.

On April 24, 2007, their second album ''[[Residente o Visitante]]'' was released. Tracks in the album were partially recorded in [[Puerto Rico]] and while on tour in Colombia, Argentina and Venezuela. While recording the album, Residente and Visitante took a trip to South America to explore areas populated by [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Latin America's indigenous]] and African-descended minorities. The duo was strongly influenced by the experience; Visitante discovered and purchased several new musical instruments on the trip including a [[Jawbone (instrument)|quijada]], a [[charango]] and a [[bombo legüero]], all of which were used on the duo's song "Lllegale a Mi Guarida".<ref name="Sin Mapa"/>

Residente considered this album to be darker than the first, but also more introspective and biographical. The album garnered controversy for its sexual and religious overtones.<ref name="Reuters">{{cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-calle-idUSTRE49309420081004|title=Calle 13 still defying labels on third album|agency=Reuters|last=Cobo|first=Leila|date=October 3, 2008|access-date=January 31, 2011|magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]|archive-date=February 1, 2013|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130201111811/http://www.reuters.com/article/2008/10/04/us-calle-idUSTRE49309420081004|url-status=live}}</ref> As part of the album, Calle 13 filmed the video for their first single off the album, "[[Tango del Pecado]]", on February 25, 2007.

[[File:ReneIleana20080424.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Residente and PG-13 during the 34th. Support to ''Claridad'' Festival, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, April 24, 2008]]

In May 2007, the duo performed at [[Vive Latino#2007|Vive Latino]], and the public answered them by throwing beer bottles filled with urine. In 2010, when taking part of the same festival, they were less bitterly welcomed.<ref name=emequis/> In July 2007, Calle 13 teamed up with [[Julio Voltio]] to speak out against police brutality in Puerto Rico.<ref name="RL">{{cite web|url=http://www.reggaetonline.net/voltio-residente-calle-13-08222007_news|title=Julio Voltio and Residente (Calle 13) Denounce Police brutality with Two New Songs|work=reggaetonline.net|access-date=November 20, 2015}}</ref> After recording a song titled "Tributo a la Policía", Calle 13 distributed the single free on the streets in front of the Police Headquarters of [[San Juan, Puerto Rico|San Juan]].

On November 8, 2007, Calle 13, along with Orishas, performed the song "Pa'l Norte" at the [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2007|8th Annual Latin Grammy Awards]], held at the [[Mandalay Bay Events Center]] in [[Las Vegas Valley|Las Vegas]], [[Nevada]]. Their live performance featured the percussion/dance group [[Stomp (dance troupe)|Stomp]]. A troupe of dancers dressed in traditional Latin American garb and wearing [[bandanna]]s in their faces (as if they were [[bandits]]) were also featured. Two members of the traditional Colombian folk cumbia band [[Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto]], as well as members from an indigenous tribe local to the Gaiteros' hometown in northern Colombia, followed Residente to the stage at the beginning of the song. The subtext of the presentation was that Latin Americans were "invading the North" (the United States) and were there to stay.

Calle 13 earned two Latin Grammys later that night: "Best Urban Music Album" for ''Residente o Visitante'' and "Best Urban Song" for "Pal Norte".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nydailynews.com/latino/2007/11/08/2007-11-08_winners_of_the_2007_latin_grammy_awards.html|title=Winners of the 2007 Latin Grammy Awards|work=New York Daily News|date=November 9, 2007|access-date=February 10, 2011}}</ref> They were nominated for two other categories,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hollywoodtoday.net/2007/11/09/2847/|title=Winning five Latin Grammy Awards at Vegas ceremony even better than scoring at the tables|work=Hollywood today|date=November 9, 2007|access-date=January 12, 2013|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130221170448/http://www.hollywoodtoday.net/2007/11/09/2847/|archive-date=February 21, 2013}}</ref> the others being [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video|Best Short Form Music Video]] and [[Latin Grammy Award for Album of the Year|Album of the Year]]. The Gaiteros de San Jacinto, who had also received a Grammy for their album ''Un Fuego de Sangre Pura'', could only accept it when Calle 13 intervened to finance their trip to Las Vegas and obtain a temporary visa to visit the United States on their behalf.<ref name=LGSJ>{{cite news|last=Polo|first=Liliana Martínez|title='Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto' con todo pago por 'Calle 13' hacia los 'Premios Grammy Latinos'|url=http://www.eltiempo.com/archivo/documento/CMS-3804402|newspaper=[[El Tiempo (Colombia)|El Tiempo]]|access-date=January 12, 2013|language=es|date=November 6, 2007}}</ref>

A later tour of the Americas had Calle 13 perform to sell-out crowds in Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Uruguay and Argentina. The band also performed in the United States, including an appearance at the [[New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival]] on April 27, 2008.

The band received all three possible audience acceptance awards when they performed at the 2008 [[Viña del Mar International Song Festival]] in [[Viña del Mar]], Chile, taming the usually demanding crowd (traditionally nicknamed "El Monstruo", or "The Monster"—because of its fickleness—by Chilean media). They also performed to a sold-out crowd at [[Luna Park, Buenos Aires|Luna Park]] in [[Buenos Aires]], Argentina. They finished their tour at the 34th Annual [[Claridad]] Support Festival in San Juan on April 24, 2008. [[Denise Quiñones]] joined the band onstage for their abbreviated song set.

[[File:Residente 2009.jpg|thumb|left|Residente performing on August 29, 2009.]]

===2008–2010: ''Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo''===
On 2008, their "Atrévete-te-te" song was a featured track on the game ''[[Grand Theft Auto IV]]'', playing in the lineup of the fictional [[Grand Theft Auto IV soundtrack#San Juan Sounds|San Juan Sounds radio station]].

On October 9, 2008, Calle 13 participated in the "MTV Tr3s Pass Tour".<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.primerahora.com/calientamotoresenfamilia-237678.html| archive-url=https://archive.today/20130216164329/http://www.primerahora.com/calientamotoresenfamilia-237678.html| url-status=dead| archive-date=February 16, 2013| title=Calienta motores en familia| author=Aixa Sepúlveda Morales| newspaper=Primera Hora| language=es| date=October 10, 2008| access-date=January 13, 2013}}</ref>

In an interview done during the production of their third album, ''[[Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo]]'', Calle 13 stated that the production would include songs discussing poverty.<ref name="marginados">{{cite news|url=http://www.primerahora.com/vuelvenacantaralosmarginados-217438.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130216180739/http://www.primerahora.com/vuelvenacantaralosmarginados-217438.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=February 16, 2013|title=Vuelven a cantar a los marginados|author=Morales, Aixa Sepúlveda|newspaper=[[Primera Hora (Puerto Rico)|Primera Hora]]|language=es|date=August 7, 2008|access-date=January 11, 2013}}</ref> The duo also noted that the production would include [[cumbia villera]] and "sounds from Eastern Europe".<ref name="marginados"/>

On October 21, 2008, the album was released. A series of songs off the album began to be released weekly as singles. Four singles were released: "Que Lloren" (September 16, 2008); "[[Electro Movimiento]]" (September 23, 2008); "[[Fiesta de Locos]]" (September 30, 2008); and "[[No Hay Nadie Como Tú]]", the latter featuring [[Café Tacuba]]. On August 11, 2009, the duo was invited to Ecuador by [[Rafael Correa]]'s government, serving as guests in the local celebrations that commemorate the coup that began the [[Ecuadorian War of Independence]]. They played in [[Quito]], performing in [[Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa]] for the first time, in an activity that included [[Nueva canción|Nueva Canción: Argentina]], [[León Gieco]] and speeches by Correa, Venezuelan president [[Hugo Chávez]], deposed president of Honduras [[Manuel Zelaya]], Cuban president [[Raúl Castro]] and Nicaraguan president [[Daniel Ortega]]. During the performance Residente said that he wished Puerto Rico could be an independent country such as Ecuador.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.eluniverso.com/2009/08/12/1/1378/leon-gieco-calle-cautivaron-quito.html| title=León Gieco y Calle 13 cautivaron en Quito| publisher=[[El Universo]]| language=es| date=August 12, 2009| access-date=November 8, 2009}}</ref>

Pérez made a cameo appearance in the 2009 film ''[[Old Dogs (film)|Old Dogs]]'', being cast to interpret a tattoo artist.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.primerahora.com/diario/noticia/cine/espectaculos_asi/de_aqui_pa_hollywood_calle_13/345720| title=De aquí pa' Hollywood Calle 13| author=Ana Enid López Rodríguez| newspaper=[[Primera Hora (Guaynabo)|Primera Hora]]| language=es| date=November 23, 2009| access-date=March 25, 2010| archive-date=March 14, 2010| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100314102539/http://www.primerahora.com/diario/noticia/cine/espectaculos_asi/de_aqui_pa_hollywood_calle_13/345720| url-status=dead}}</ref>

On October 15, 2009, Calle 13 won the Premios MTV Latinoamérica for Best Urban Artist.<ref name="Fortuño esquívate este">{{cite web| url=http://www.primerahora.com/diario/noticia/tv/espectaculosasi/residente_le_tira_con_to_a_fortuno/338199| title=Residente le tira con to' a Fortuño| work=[[Primera Hora (Guaynabo)|Primera Hora]]| language=es| date=October 15, 2009| access-date=October 16, 2009| archive-date=August 23, 2017| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170823074159/http://www.primerahora.com/diario/noticia/tv/espectaculosasi/residente_le_tira_con_to_a_fortuno/338199| url-status=dead}}</ref> Pérez also served as host throughout the ceremony, using this exposure to insult Puerto Rican governor [[Luis Fortuño]] and comment about a civilian general strike that was organized earlier that day, held to protest the firing of more than 25,000 public employees by Fortuño's administration.<ref name="Fortuño esquívate este"/> Pérez was criticised after referring to Fortuño as an "hijo de la gran puta".<ref name="Latina Magazine">{{cite web|url=http://www.latina.com/entertainment/music/poll-did-calle-13-go-too-far|title=POLL: Did Calle 13 Go Too Far?|last=Rosario|first=Mariela|date=October 19, 2009|work=[[Latina (magazine)|Latina]]|publisher=Vibe Media Group}}</ref> The phrase is commonly translated as "son of a bitch", although the phrase places emphasis on the mother of the subject being a prostitute, which many found disrespectful to Fortuño's mother. Fortuño responded by saying "This individual disrespected all Puerto Rican women, all Puerto Rican mothers and the people of Puerto Rico in general."<ref name="Latina Magazine"/>

''Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo'' was nominated in five categories for the [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2009|2009 Latin Grammy Awards]] winning all of them, including Album of the Year, Best Urban Album, Record of the Year and Best Alternative Song for the hit single "No Hay Nadie Como Tu" along with Café Tacuba, as well as Best Music Video (in Short Format) for "La Perla" featuring salsa artist [[Rubén Blades]]. The winners were announced on November 5, 2009, in a ceremony held at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.aztecaespectaculos.com/nota/musica/calle-13-liderea-nominaciones-al-grammy-latino-2009/2009-09-1933 |title=Calle 13 liderea nominaciones al Grammy Latino 2009 - Música |publisher=www.aztecaespectaculos.com |access-date=January 3, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100107033215/http://www.aztecaespectaculos.com/nota/musica/calle-13-liderea-nominaciones-al-grammy-latino-2009/2009-09-1933 |archive-date=January 7, 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

On March 23, 2010, the band performed their first concert in Cuba, the event was held at the [[José Martí Anti-Imperialist Plaza]] before an estimated crowd that ranged between 500,000 and 900,000 fans.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.primerahora.com/diario/noticia/musica/espectaculosasi/%C2%A1200,000__vieron_a_calle_13_en_cuba!/376325| title=¡200,000 vieron a Calle 13 en Cuba!| author=Amary Santiago Torres| work=[[Primera Hora (Guaynabo)|Primera Hora]]| language=es| date=March 23, 2010| access-date=March 25, 2010| archive-date=March 27, 2010| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100327064517/http://www.primerahora.com/diario/noticia/musica/espectaculosasi/%C2%A1200,000__vieron_a_calle_13_en_cuba!/376325| url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite book| title=Calle 13 le canta a medio millón de cubanos| publisher=[[El Nuevo Día]]| language=es| chapter=Flash| location=Puerto Rico| date=March 24, 2010}}</ref> The band performed "No Hay Nadie Como Tú", "La Cumbia de los Aburridos", "Se Vale Tó-Tó", "La Hormiga Brava", "Un Beso de Desayuno", "Pa'l Norte", "Fiesta de Locos", "Querido FBI", "La Jirafa" and "Tango del Pecado", before adding "Electro Movimiento" and "Atrévete te-te" due to popular demand. During this event, Calle 13 received the international Cubadisco award from representatives of the Instituto Cubano de la Música (lit. Cuban Music Institute).<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.primerahora.com/diario/noticia/musica/espectaculosasi/calle_13_recibira_premio_internacional_cubadisco_2010/374684| title=Calle 13 recibirá Premio Internacional Cubadisco 2010| newspaper=[[Primera Hora (Guaynabo)|Primera Hora]]| language=es| date=March 16, 2010| access-date=March 25, 2010| archive-date=March 4, 2016| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304064437/http://www.primerahora.com/diario/noticia/musica/espectaculosasi/calle_13_recibira_premio_internacional_cubadisco_2010/374684| url-status=dead}}</ref> The group originally planned to participate in [[Paz Sin Fronteras#Paz Sin Fronteras II|Paz Sin Fronteras II]], but were unable to acquire visas in time.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.elmundo.es/america/2010/03/23/gentes/1269367744.html| title=Preparan un concierto: Calle 13 en La Habana| author=Romina Ruiz-Goiriena| publisher=El Mundo.es| language=es| date=March 23, 2010| access-date=March 25, 2010}}</ref>

The band has also filmed a documentary. The film, ''Sin Mapa'', is about their journeys through South America and the land's indigenous culture and art.<ref>{{cite news|last=Flores |first=Alfredo |url=http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/artsdesk/music/2009/07/20/latin-alternative-music-conference-wrap-up/ |title=Latin Alternative Music Conference Wrap-Up - Arts Desk |newspaper=Washington City Paper |date=July 20, 2009 |access-date=January 3, 2011}}</ref> The movie became available on iTunes and DVD on July 28, 2010.

===2010–2012: ''Entren Los Que Quieran''===
Calle 13 released their latest album, ''[[Entren Los Que Quieran]]'', on November 22, 2010.<ref name="Latina">{{cite web|url=http://www.latina.com/entertainment/music/exclusive-calle-13-said-no-reggaeton-new-album|title=Calle 13 "Said No to Reggaeton" on New Album|last=Bastidas|first=Grace|date=November 4, 2010|work=Latina |access-date=November 7, 2010}}</ref> The singles "Calma Pueblo" and "Vamo' a Portarnos Mal" have been released to the [[iTunes Store]]. Visitante explained that the title of the album means that "Everyone's invited to enter. If you don't want to, well don't."<ref name="Latina"/> He also stated that the album continues to experiment with different styles of music, with collaborations with [[Omar Rodríguez-López]] from [[The Mars Volta]] on "Calma Pueblo", giving the song a "[[Beastie Boys]] vibe". He stated that there would also be influences from [[Bollywood]] and South American rhythms.<ref name="Latina"/> The promotional tour for ''Entren Los Que Quieran'' featured over a hundred presentations in 2011, spanning most of Latin America and parts of Europe. Among the most notable being serving as the sole representation of Puerto Rico at the inauguration of the [[Community of Latin American and Caribbean States]] and their performance at the 2011 Viña del Mar Festival, where Calle 13 decided to go against the event's rules, refusing further awards beyond a "Silver Torch" in order to avoid further interruption, despite being the most clamored artist in that night.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://m.aollatino.com/blog/musica/2011/02/24/calle-13-mejor-tercera-noche-vina-del-mar/ |title=Calle 13, lo mejor de la tercera noche de Viña del Mar |publisher=Aol Latino |language=es |date=February 24, 2011 |access-date=January 1, 2012 |archive-date=April 26, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120426060025/http://m.aollatino.com/blog/musica/2011/02/24/calle-13-mejor-tercera-noche-vina-del-mar/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> On November 19, 2011, the group offered a concert in El Salvador where the entrance gate was fully paid in rice and beans, the collected food was subsequently donated to flood victims in that country.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://entretenimiento.starmedia.com/musica/concierto-benefico-calle-13-todo-exito.html |title=Concierto benéfico de calle 13 todo un éxito |author=Fabricio Alonso |publisher=starMedia Latino América |language=es |date=November 21, 2011 |access-date=January 1, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120603015135/http://entretenimiento.starmedia.com/musica/concierto-benefico-calle-13-todo-exito.html |archive-date=June 3, 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Pérez also remixed an exclusive version of "El Hormiguero" for four-time world boxing champion [[Miguel Cotto]], who used it in his entrance prior to a successful title defense on December 3, 2011.

Upon release, the music video for "Calma Pueblo" generated controversy for its violence and full-frontal nudity, which the band claims is a metaphor for self-liberation.<ref name="Anger">{{cite web|url=http://www.nydailynews.com/latino/2010/11/17/2010-11-17_residente_tames_his_anger.html|title=Calle 13's Residente tames his anger in new CD, 'Everybody Is Welcome'|last=Morales|first=Ed|work=NY Daily News|date=October 17, 2010|access-date=January 31, 2011}}</ref>
The album received more nominations for the [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2011|12th Latin Grammy Awards]] than any other production that year. It went on to win nine categories in total "Album of the Year", "Best Urban Music Album" and "Producer of the Year" in general; "Best Urban Song" for "Baile de los Pobres"; "Best Tropical Song" for "Vamo' a Potarnos Mal"; "Best Short Form Music Video" for "Calma Pueblo"; "Song of the Year" and "Record of the Year" for "Latinoamérica".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://musica.uol.com.br/ultnot/2011/11/11/dupla-porto-riquenha-calle-13-domina-grammy-latino-2011.jhtm|title=Com nove prêmios, dupla porto-riquenha Calle 13 domina Grammy Latino 2011|work=[[Universo Online|UOL Música]]|date=October 11, 2011|access-date=January 16, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120103030232/http://musica.uol.com.br/ultnot/2011/11/11/dupla-porto-riquenha-calle-13-domina-grammy-latino-2011.jhtm|archive-date=January 3, 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref> Following this ceremony, Calle 13 emerged as the artist or group with most awards won in the event with 19, besting Juanes' 17. This accomplishment also shattered several records, including "Most Honored Album", "Most Latin Grammies won in one night" and increased their leadership in the "Most Latin Grammies won by a group" category to 13 more than their closest competitors.

In the press conference that followed, the group was interviewed by journalist Elvis Castillo of VENFM regarding his support to some elements of the Latin American left-wing. The journalist, a member of the conservative Venezuelan opposition, cited the work of local cartoonist Edo, a sketch of one of Pérez's characteristic black shirts scribbled with the phrase ''A Calle 13: No es lo mismo ver la Revolución como Visitante que como Residente'' (lit. "To Calle 13: It is not the same to see the [[Bolivarian Revolution|Revolution]] as a Visitor as it is as a Resident") to question a supposed sympathy for [[Chavismo]]. Pérez disregarded that notion, stating that "[Calle 13] does not support any president, because when we support any president we stop belonging to the people." On June 22, 2011, Calle 13 performed at The Pachamama Peace Festival and supported the project together with 8 Latin American embassies as the Godparent of the Pachamama Project.

On December 22, 2011, the group received the Medalla Ramón Emeterio Betances from the Ateneo Puertorriqueño, the oldest cultural institution in Puerto Rico, as part of their Puerto Rican Flag Day celebrations. In the event, Pérez was heralded as the "[[Roberto Clemente]] of modern music" by host [[Luis Gutierrez]], only to respond that he was "merely another member of [the Puerto Rican people] who decided to express [his] message". However, he admitted that being recognized in his motherland held more weight than any other award received during his career.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.noticel.com/mobile/detalle/115257/residente-esto-es-mas-poderoso-que-los-grammys.html |title=Residente: "Esto es más poderoso que los Grammys" |author=Melissa Solórzano García |publisher=Noticel.com |language=es |date=December 22, 2011 |access-date=December 22, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120530182629/http://www.noticel.com/mobile/detalle/115257/residente-esto-es-mas-poderoso-que-los-grammys.html |archive-date=May 30, 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

=== 2013–present: ''Multi Viral'' and hiatus ===
On November 13, 2013, the group released the track and video "[[Multi Viral (song)|Multi Viral]]", which featured [[WikiLeaks]] founder [[Julian Assange]] and Palestinian singer Kamilya Jubran on vocals and [[Tom Morello]] on guitar.<ref>{{cite magazine | url=http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/latin-notas/5785909/calle-13-releases-multiviral-with-help-from-julian-assange-tom|title=Calle 13 Releases 'Multi_Viral' With Help from Julian Assange, Tom Morello: Listen|magazine=Billboard |date=November 13, 2013 | access-date=November 15, 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.democracynow.org/2013/11/15/calle_13_s_rene_residente_perez |title=Calle 13's René "Residente" Pérez on Revolutionary Music, WikiLeaks & Puerto Rican Independence | publisher=[[Democracy Now!]] | date=November 15, 2013 | access-date=November 15, 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/11/13/calle-13-multi-viral_n_4269864.html |work=[[Huffington Post]]|title=WATCH: Calle 13 Releases Julian Assange Collaboration (VIDEO) |date=November 13, 2013|access-date=November 15, 2013}}</ref>

In December 2013, they announced that their new album would be named ''[[Multi Viral]]'' and it would be followed by a Latin American tour, which saw the band performing in Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile, Venezuela, Colombia, Costa Rica and Mexico.<ref name=MVPH>{{cite news|title=Calle 13 anuncia salida de su nuevo álbum Multi_Viral|url=http://www.primerahora.com/entretenimiento/musica/nota/calle13anunciasalidadesunuevoalbummultiviral-974624/|access-date=December 5, 2013|newspaper=[[Primera Hora (Puerto Rico)|Primera Hora]]|date=December 5, 2013|language=es}}</ref> The album was released through their new own label, El Abismo,<ref name=MVPH/> since they decided not to continue their contract with Sony Music Latin.<ref>{{cite magazine|last=Cantor-Navas|first=Judy|title=Calle 13 Going Indie for New Album, Single|url=http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/latin-notas/5777967/calle-13-going-indie-for-new-album-single|access-date=December 5, 2013|magazine=Billboard|date=October 31, 2013|location=Los Angeles}}</ref> The tour unofficially began at the [[University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras Campus]] in San Juan, where Calle 13 held an impromptu free concert on February 25, 2014. The event was announced only six days before and did not receive formal promotion.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.elnuevodia.com/calle13confirmaconciertogratuitoenlaisla-1715679.html|title=Calle 13 confirma concierto gratuito en la Isla|work=El Nuevo Dia|access-date=November 20, 2015|archive-date=December 20, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141220210039/http://www.elnuevodia.com/calle13confirmaconciertogratuitoenlaisla-1715679.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> The concert, which featured interludes where the group opposed a revision in the UPR's enrollment fee and allowed a low income child to voice the concerns of his community, managed to attract an estimate of 50,000 fans.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.noticel.com/noticia/156409/calle-13-acapara-la-ave-universidad-antes-de-irse-multiviral-por-el-mundo-galeria.html|title=Calle 13 acapara la Ave. Universidad antes de irse "Multiviral" por el mundo (galería)|work=noticel.com|access-date=November 20, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141020050603/http://www.noticel.com/noticia/156409/calle-13-acapara-la-ave-universidad-antes-de-irse-multiviral-por-el-mundo-galeria.html|archive-date=October 20, 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="Agapito"/> The event featured the live debut of "El Aguante", which opened the show.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.dialogodigital.com/index.php/Calle-13-UPR.html |title=Miles reciben a Calle 13 frente a la UPR |access-date=March 4, 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141026054437/http://www.dialogodigital.com/index.php/Calle-13-UPR.html |archive-date=October 26, 2014 }}</ref> Despite recognizing that his political ideology conflicted with the inmovilist conservative ideals of governor [[Alejandro García Padilla]], Pérez accompanied the same child to a reunion in [[La Fortaleza]] the following day.<ref name="Agapito">{{cite web|url=http://www.noticel.com/noticia/156459/calle-13-llega-al-final-de-la-calle-fortaleza-con-jovenes-del-cano-martin-pena-galeria.html|title=Calle 13 llega al final de la Calle Fortaleza con jóvenes del Caño Martín Peña (galería)|work=noticel.com|access-date=November 20, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141020050513/http://www.noticel.com/noticia/156459/calle-13-llega-al-final-de-la-calle-fortaleza-con-jovenes-del-cano-martin-pena-galeria.html|archive-date=October 20, 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref>

In May 2014, the duo once again performed at Vive Latino. When they were playing "El Aguante", one spectator jumped onto the stage and tried to take Residente's microphone. Five security guards grabbed the invader and Residente tried to punch him.<ref name=emequis/> The duo later issued a statement (with a fan-made video of the incident) in which they say Residente's punch never actually hit the aggressor.<ref name=lifeboxset>{{cite web|title=Residente se reúne con el fan que lo "atacó" en el Vive Latino|url=http://www.lifeboxset.com/2014/residente-calle-13-fan-vive-latino/|website=LifeBoxSet|access-date=October 20, 2014|language=es|date=April 3, 2014}}</ref> They also included a video in which Residente is shown with the attacker sharing a drink and celebrating the fifth album.<ref name=lifeboxset/>

Following the end of their ''Multi_Viral'' world tour, Residente and Visitante went separate ways to focus on personal projects - the former would see the release of his first solo effort, ''[[Residente (album)|Residente]]'', in March 2017. In October 2018, Visitante premiered his new musical project "Trending Tropics", a collaboration with Dominican singer [[Vicente García (musician)|Vicente García]].<ref>{{Cite magazine|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/trending-tropics-cyber-monday-735503/|title=Hear Trending Tropics Channel Disco-Rock on 'Cyber Monday'|last=Leight|first=Elias|date=October 11, 2018|magazine=Rolling Stone|access-date=November 9, 2018|language=en-US}}</ref> Though at the time of his album's release some media outlets referred to Calle 13 as a defunct band,<ref>{{cite magazine|last1=Exposito|first1=Suzy|title=Calle 13's Residente Talks Exploring Global Roots on Star-Studded Solo Debut|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/calle-13s-residente-talks-exploring-global-roots-on-debut-w474279|magazine=[[Rolling Stone]]|publisher=Wenner Media LLC|access-date=April 10, 2017|date=April 4, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last1=Pareles|first1=Jon|author-link1=Jon Pareles|title=Residente Chases His Muse, at the Genetic Level|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/20/arts/music/residente-calle-13-solo-album-interview.html?_r=0|website=The New York Times|access-date=April 11, 2017|date=January 20, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=El rapero puertorriqueño Residente dirige el video de un sencillo de su primer disco en solitario|url=http://www.efe.com/efe/america/cultura/el-rapero-puertorriqueno-residente-dirige-video-de-un-sencillo-su-primer-disco-en-solitario/20000009-3058784|website=[[EFE]]|access-date=April 12, 2017|location=[[San Juan, Puerto Rico|San Juan]]|language=es|date=October 4, 2016}}</ref> Residente had previously said on multiple occasions that the band is not over and is just taking a break.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Moreno|first1=Carolina|title=Calle 13 Isn't Separating, Residente Clarifies Group's Recent Decision|url=http://www.huffpostbrasil.com/entry/calle-13-isnt-separating-residente_us_55b7f0b5e4b0074ba5a6a500|website=[[The Huffington Post]]|publisher=[[Verizon Communications]]|access-date=April 17, 2017|date=July 28, 2015|archive-date=April 18, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170418082733/http://www.huffpostbrasil.com/entry/calle-13-isnt-separating-residente_us_55b7f0b5e4b0074ba5a6a500|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==Musical style==
==Musical style==
{{Listen
Although most people labeled Calle 13's music as [[reggaeton]], they've tried to distance themselve from that particular style. And while some of their songs carry a reggaeton beat, they mix it with many other rhythms from various countries. Visitante, being a professional musician, tries to fuse each song with diverse styles. Their early songs featured elements like [[jazz]], [[bossa nova]] and [[salsa music|salsa]], while recent songs feature [[cumbia]], [[tango music|tango]], [[electronica]] and others. In their recent tours around [[Latin America]] they've added different musical elements according to the place they're playing in.
|filename=Calle 13 - Un beso de desayuno.ogg
|title="Un Beso de Desayuno"
|description="Un Beso de Desayuno" from ''Residente o Visitante'' features the band experimenting with [[bossa nova]] and [[electronica]] music. The song's electronic elements helped to create a "warped" sound.<ref name="NYtimesreview">{{cite news|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C07E4D8173EF930A15757C0A9619C8B63|title=Critic's Choice - New CDs - Residente o Visitante|last=Pareles|first=Jon|date=April 23, 2007|access-date=March 18, 2012|work=The New York Times}}</ref>
|format=[[Ogg]]
|filename2= 02 Calma Pueblo.ogg
|title2 = "Calma Pueblo"
|description2= This song from ''Entren Los Que Quieran'' features "vicious" guitar work from [[Omar Rodríguez-López]] from [[The Mars Volta]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://allmusic.com/album/entren-los-que-quieran-r2016811/review|title=Entren Los Que Quieran Review|last=Prunes|first=Mariano|work=[[Allmusic]]|publisher=Prometheus Global Media|access-date=February 5, 2011}}</ref> Visitante compared the track to the [[Beastie Boys]].<ref name="Latina"/>
|format2=[[Ogg]]
}}


Although most people have labeled Calle 13's music as [[reggaeton]], the band has tried to distance itself from the style.<ref name="Sin Mapa"/> Indeed, Residente once admitted the group played reggaeton in their first album as way of gaining some initial popularity more easily, while assuring that the group has nothing against the genre.<ref name=emequis/> Visitante, being a professional musician, tries to fuse diverse styles in the group's songs. Early cuts featured elements from [[jazz]], [[bossa nova]] and [[salsa music|salsa]], while recent songs feature [[cumbia]], [[tango music|tango]], [[electronica]] and others. In their recent tours around Latin America they have added different musical elements according to the place the band is playing in, yet many of their songs carry the traditional reggaeton "Dem Bow" beat such as in their hit "[[Tango del Pecado]]" and the remix to "Suave".
Singer Residente is reluctant to label their music in a specific genre, instead calling it plain [[urban music|urban]] style. He has a clear preference of [[hip hop]] over traditional reggaeton and both he and his brother justify it by saying that only three songs in their debut album feature reggaeton beats.<ref name="CALLE">[http://www.latinrapper.com/calle_13_interview.html Latin Hip Hop Interview - "Calle 13 Cross Spanish Rap's Musical Borders"]</ref>.


Singer Residente is reluctant to label their music in a specific genre, instead calling it plain [[urban music|urban]] style. In an interview with Rueben Blades, Rene mentioned that he is wary of making generic [[hip hop music|hip hop]] and traditional reggaeton. He added that even though he welcomes the "urbanity" of Hip Hop, he does not consider it to be an authentic Latin American musical expression. On the other hand, he believes that reggaeton has become generic and watered down with pop aesthetics.<ref name="Interview with Rueben Blades">{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_P8ALGq7p8|title=Interview with Ruben Blades|date=March 8, 2008|last=Blades|first=Rueben|access-date=December 19, 2011|work=Rueben Blades Official Youtube}}</ref> Calle 13 has maintained a healthy distance from the orthodoxy of [[reggaeton]] and both he and his brother justify it by saying that only three songs out of fifteen songs in their eponymous debut album, as well as four out of fifteen songs in their album ''[[Residente o Visitante]]'', feature reggaetón beats.<ref name="CALLE"/> Residente said of the group's musical style "I love to mix things up, like on our song 'La Jirafa’. We have drumming from Brazil combined with the theme music from the film ''[[Amélie]]''. It's a pretty song, a love song for a woman, but it's about Puerto Rico too. I think this why people like our music, because – sexually speaking or politically speaking – it's just very genuine."<ref name="Telegraph">{{cite web|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/rockandpopfeatures/5978736/Calle-13-interview.html|title=Calle 13 interview|date=August 6, 2009|last=Horan|first=Tom|access-date=February 5, 2011|work=The Telegraph}}</ref>
Residente's lyrical style is inspired partly by artists like [[Vico C]] and [[Tego Calderon]]'s approach, trying to minimize what they refer to as "clichés" of the genre like open confrontations with other rappers (known in Spanish as ''"tira'era"'', or tiradera) and using instead lots of Puerto-Rican [[slang]] and [[allegory|allegories]]. Residente has then developed a lyrical style full of [[sarcasm]], [[parody]] and [[shock value]].


[[File:Calle13residente.jpg|thumb|left|Residente performing in [[Veracruz, Veracruz|Veracruz, Mexico]] on August 29, 2009.]]
==Critical Reception==
Residente's lyrical style is inspired partly by the lyrical approach used by artists such as [[Vico C]] and [[Tego Calderón]], trying to minimize what they refer to as "clichés" of the genre -such as open confrontations with other rappers, known in Spanish as ''tiradera'' (pronounced {{IPA|es|tiɾaˈeɾa|}} in Puerto Rican dialect). He attempts to stray away from the "wannabe gangster aesthetic" typical of reggaeton music.<ref name="Sin Mapa"/> Residente's trademark is a lyrical style full of [[sarcasm]], [[satire]], [[parody]] and [[shock value]], which some critics and fans have likened to [[Eminem]]'s.<ref name="Allmusic"/> Jason Birchmeier of [[AllMusic]] writes that Residente's lyrical style and delivery "eschews reggaeton's clichés, showcasing a healthy sense of humor and an almost clownish approach to sarcasm&nbsp;... A world apart from the kingly bravado of most reggaeton vocalists, not to mention the obligatory glimmers of [[misogyny]] and [[violence]] that accompany such streetwise swaggering."<ref name="Allmusic"/> Residente also utilizes Puerto Rican [[slang]] considerably (which in turn incorporates a sizeable dose of [[Spanglish]]), as well as [[allegory]]. Early in his career, Residente expressed a desire to write lyrics only in Spanish, however he has recently stated that he will begin to write more lyrics in English in order to help communicate with English-speaking listeners.<ref name="Telegraph"/>
Ever since Calle 13 first single ("Querido FBI") was heard on radio, they have been praised mainly for what many consider to be a unique musical and lyrical style. This was evidenced by the acceptance received by their debut album.


Residente's lyrics treat a wide and eclectic variety of subjects. He mentions (and sometimes derides) celebrities and icons such as [[Mickey Mouse]], [[Redman (rapper)|Redman]], and [[2Pac]], in "Tengo Hambre" (''I'm Hungry''); [[50 Cent]] in "La Crema" (''The Cream''); [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]] ("I mean, [[Diego Maradona|Maradona]]", Residente says) in "Sin Exagerar" (''Without Exaggeration''); Puerto Rican singer [[Nydia Caro]] (rather affectionately) in "La Era de la Copiaera", wrestler [[Abdullah the Butcher]] in "Tributo a la Policía" (''A Tribute to Police''), golfer [[Tiger Woods]] in "Baile de los Pobres" ("Dance of the Poor") he also made a [[diss track]] to [[Sean Combs|Diddy]] in the song "Pi-Di-Di-Di (La Especialidad de la Casa)" (''House Specialty'') and a diss track aimed at the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]] in "Querido FBI" (''Dear FBI'').
The acceptance of the music of Calle 13 has even reached the [[Governor of Puerto Rico]], [[Anibal Acevedo Vilá]] who, in December 2005, admitted to listening to Calle 13 because his son had copied some of their songs to his [[iPod]]. Acevedo claimed that "songs such as Calle 13's were eye openers" to him. As a result, since the country had a chronic problem of people being unknowingly injured or killed by stray bullets fired to the air on [[New Year's Eve]], Acevedo felt compelled to invite the duo to [[La Fortaleza]] and to have them record a song against shootings bullets in the air as a way of celebrating the holiday.<ref name="GOV">[http://www.zonai.com/noticia_mainm.asp?ZONAI:81318&pos=m&title=ESPECTACULOS&catid=6 Zonai.com Article about Calle 13 and the Governor of Puerto Rico "Residente Calle 13 en campaña contra las balas"]</ref>


Visitante, on the other hand, is strongly influenced by [[electronica]], [[world music]], and particularly Latin American folk and popular music. He has also said that he is influenced by music from Central Europe such as [[Fanfare Ciocărlia|Fanfare Ciocarlia]] (particularly its collaboration with [[Romani people|Romani]] band Kaloome, also known as The Gypsy Kings and Queens) and [[Emir Kusturica]]'s group, The No Smoking Orchestra. He also stated that his musician father introduced the [[Beatles]] and [[Jimi Hendrix]] to him at a young age, which has greatly influenced his music.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7wARKQQGxw |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111019121429/http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7wARKQQGxw&gl=US&hl=en |archive-date=October 19, 2011 |url-status=dead|title=adidas Originals - Calle 13 |via=YouTube |access-date=January 3, 2011}}</ref> In live presentations, Visitante can be seen playing a variety of instruments: an electric guitar, synthesizers, an accordion, a [[melodica]], a Puerto Rican [[cuatro (instrument)|cuatro]] and a [[theremin]].
The single, "Ley De Gravedad" (Law of Gravity) was released as part of a public-service campaign for that matter. Some political adversaries of Acevedo dismissed this as a trick to ingratiate himself with Puerto Rican youth and pro-independence advocates, and was criticized by the local press due to the fact that an artist who seemingly promoted violence with their "Querido FBI" song was now supposed to be a [[role model]] for anti-violence. However, the campaign was thought to be effective in reducing the injured, from twelve (and one death) the previous year, to three the year the campaign was run, though many members of the artistic community contributed to this effort in separate campaigns.<ref name="BALAS">[https://www.prpop.org/noticias/ene06/reggaeton_ene04.shtml Fundación Nacional para la Cultura Popular "Calle 13 en campaña de la oficialidad"]</ref>


== Members ==
As the duo has rose to fame, other international artists of various genres have sought them. In 2006 and 2007, they recorded songs with [[Canadian]] [[Nelly Furtado]] and [[Spain|Spanish]] [[Alejandro Sanz]]. In their recent album, they feature contributions with such diverse groups like [[Orishas]] (from [[Cuba]]), [[Argentinian]] Vicentico (from [[Los Fabulosos Cadillacs]]), and [[La Mala Rodríguez]] (from [[Spain]]), among others.
'''Recording members'''
* [[Residente]] (René Pérez Joglar) – lead vocals
* [[Visitante]] (Eduardo Cabra Martínez) – guitar, [[melodica]], harmonica, piano, synthesizer, [[Cuatro (instrument)|cuatro]], accordion, keyboard, banjo, ukulele, violin, organ, [[theremin]], [[kalimba]] and other instruments
* PG-13 ([[ILE (singer)]]) – backup vocals


'''Touring members'''
==Awards==
* Andrés Cruz – drums
'''2006 [[Latin Grammys]]:'''
* Héctor Barez – congas
*Won: [[Latin Grammy Award for Best New Artist|Best New Artist]]
* Arturo Verges – trombone
*Won: [[Best Urban Music Album]] for ''[[Calle 13 (album)|Calle 13]]''
* Víctor Vázquez – saxophone
*Won: [[Best Short Form Music Video]] for "[[Atrevete-te-te!]]"
* Ismael Cancel – drums
* Jonathan González – bass guitar
* Jerry D Medina – trumpet
* Michael Santana – [[clarinet]]


==Discography==
'''2006 [[MTV Video Music Awards Latin America|MTV Latin]]:'''
{{main|Calle 13 discography}}
*Won: Best New Artist
* ''[[Calle 13 (album)|Calle 13]]'' (2005)
* ''[[Residente o Visitante]]'' (2007)
* ''[[Los De Atrás Vienen Conmigo]]'' (2008)
* ''[[Entren Los Que Quieran]]'' (2010)
* ''[[Multi Viral]]'' (2014)


==Awards and nominations==
'''2007 [[Billboard Latin Music Awards]]:'''
{{Further|List of awards and nominations received by Residente}}
*Nominated: [[Best Reggaeton Album]] for ''[[Calle 13 (album)|Calle 13]]''


'''Grammy Awards'''
==Albums==
{{awards table}}
<gallery>
|-
Image:Calle13.jpg|<center>'''''[[Calle 13 (album)|Calle 13]]'''''<br><center>[[November 29]], [[2005]]<br>
| {{grammy|2008}} || ''[[Residente o Visitante]]'' || [[Grammy Award for Best Latin Urban Album|Best Latin Urban Album]] || {{won}}
Image:Residente o Visitante.jpg|<center>'''''[[Residente o Visitante]]'''''<br><center>[[April 24]], [[2007]]<br>
|-
</gallery>
| {{grammy|2010}} || ''[[Los de Atras Vienen Conmigo]]'' || [[Grammy Award for Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album|Best Latin Rock, Alternative or Urban Album]] || {{won}}
|-
| {{grammy|2012}} || ''[[Entren Los Que Quieran]]'' || [[Grammy Award for Best Latin Pop, Rock or Urban Album|Best Latin Pop, Rock or Urban Album]] || {{nominated}}
|-
| {{grammy|2015}} || ''[[Multi Viral]]'' || [[Grammy Award for Best Latin Rock, Urban or Alternative Album|Best Latin Rock, Urban or Alternative Album]] || {{won}}<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.grammy.com/files/pages/57thpresslist12042014-with_aoy.pdf|title=57th Grammy Awards final nomination list|date=December 5, 2014|publisher=[[National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences]]|access-date=February 2, 2015}}</ref>
{{end}}


'''Latin Grammy Awards'''
=='''Singles''' ==
{{awards table}}
|-
|rowspan="3"| [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2006|2006]] || Calle 13 || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best New Artist|Best New Artist]] || {{won}}
|-
| ''[[Calle 13 (album)|Calle 13]]'' || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Music Album|Best Urban Music Album]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Atrévete-te-te" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video|Best Short Form Music Video]] || {{won}}
|-
|rowspan="4"| [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2007|2007]] || ''[[Residente o Visitante]]''|| [[Latin Grammy Award for Album of the Year|Album of the Year]] || {{nom}}
|-
| ''Residiente o Visitante''|| [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Music Album|Best Urban Music Album]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Pa'l Norte" (feat [[Orishas (band)|Orishas]]) || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Song|Best Urban Song]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Tango del Pecado" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video|Best Short Form Music Video]] || {{nom}}
|-
|rowspan="5"| [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2009|2009]] || ''[[Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo]]''|| [[Latin Grammy Award for Album of the Year|Album of the Year]] || {{won}}
|-
| ''[[Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo]]'' || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Music Album|Best Urban Music Album]] || {{won}}
|-
| "[[No Hay Nadie Como Tu]]" (featuring [[Café Tacuba]]) || [[Latin Grammy Award for Record of the Year|Record of the Year]] || {{won}}
|-
| "[[No Hay Nadie Como Tu]]" (featuring [[Café Tacuba]]) || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Alternative Song|Best Alternative Song]] || {{won}}
|-
| "La Perla" (featuring [[Rubén Blades]]) || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video|Best Short Form Music Video]] || {{won}}
|-
|rowspan="9"| [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2011|2011]] || ''[[Entren Los Que Quieran]]''|| [[Latin Grammy Award for Album of the Year|Album of the Year]] || {{won}}
|-
| ''[[Entren Los Que Quieran]]'' || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Music Album|Best Urban Music Album]] || {{won}}
|-
| "[[Latinoamérica (song)|Latinoamérica]]" (featuring [[Totó la Momposina]], [[Susana Baca]] and [[Maria Rita]]) || [[Latin Grammy Award for Record of the Year|Record of the Year]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Latinoamérica" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Song of the Year|Song of the Year]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Calma Pueblo" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Alternative Song|Best Alternative Song]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Baile de los Pobres" (featuring Rafa Arcaute) || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Song|Best Urban Song]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Vamo' a Portarnos Mal" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Tropical Song|Best Tropical Song]] || {{won}}
|-
| Rafael Arcaute and Calle 13 || [[Latin Grammy Award for Producer of the Year|Producer of the Year]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Calma Pueblo" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video|Best Short Form Music Video]] || {{won}}
|-
|rowspan="9"| [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2014|2014]] || ''[[Multi Viral]]''|| [[Latin Grammy Award for Album of the Year|Album of the Year]] || {{nom}}
|-
| ''[[Multi Viral]]'' || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Music Album|Best Urban Music Album]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Respira el Momento" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Record of the Year|Record of the Year]] || {{nom}}
|-
| "Ojos Color Sol" (feat [[Silvio Rodríguez]]) || [[Latin Grammy Award for Song of the Year|Song of the Year]] || {{nom}}
|-
| "El Aguante" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Alternative Song|Best Alternative Song]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Adentro" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Song|Best Urban Song]] || {{nom}}
|-
| "Cuando los Pies Besan el Piso" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Song|Best Urban Song]] || {{nom}}
|-
| "Adentro" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Performance|Best Urban Performance]] || {{nom}}
|-
| "Adentro" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video|Best Short Form Music Video]] || {{nom}}
|-
|rowspan="2"| [[Latin Grammy Awards of 2015|2015]] || "Ojos Color Sol" (feat Silvio Rodríguez) || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video|Best Short Form Music Video]] || {{won}}
|-
| "Así de Grandes Son las Ideas" || [[Latin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video|Best Short Form Music Video]] || {{nom}}
|-
{{end}}


'''Billboard Latin Music Awards'''
*"[[Querido FBI]]", 2005
{{awards table}}
*"Se Vale To' To", 2005
|-
*"Ley De Gravedad", 2005
|[[2007 Latin Billboard Music Awards|2007]]||''|[[Calle 13 (album)|Calle 13]]'' || Best Reggaeton Album || {{nom}}
*"Chulin Culin Cunflai" with [[Voltio]], 2006
|-
*"Chulin Culin Cunflai (Street Mix)" with [[Voltio]] and [[Three Six Mafia]], 2006
|[[2009 Latin Billboard Music Awards|2009]]||"[[No Hay Nadie Como Tu]]" || Hot Latin Song of the Year Vocal Duet or Collaboration || {{nom}}
*"[[Atrevete-te-te!]]", 2006
|-
*"Suave", 2006
{{end}}
*"Suave (Blass Mix)", 2006

*"Japón", 2006
'''Lo Nuestro Awards'''
*"No Hay Igual" ([[Nelly Furtado]] featuring Calle 13), 2006
{{awards table}}
*"La Jirafa", 2006
|-
*"[[Tango Del Pecado]]", 2007
|[[Premio Lo Nuestro 2008|2008]]||"Pa'l Norte" || [[Lo Nuestro Award for Video of the Year|Video of the Year]] || {{nom}}
*"La Peleita" ([[Alejandro Sanz]] featuring Calle 13), 2007
|-
|[[Premio Lo Nuestro 2009|2009]]||"Un Beso de Desayuno" || Video of the Year || {{nom}}
|-
|[[Premio Lo Nuestro 2010|2010]]||"[[No Hay Nadie Como Tu]]" || [[Lo Nuestro Award for Collaboration of the Year|Collaboration of the Year]] || {{nom}}
|-
{{end}}

'''Los Premios MTV Latinoamérica'''
{{awards table}}
|-
| 2006|| Calle 13 || Promising Artist || {{won}}
|-
| 2007 || Calle 13 || [[Los Premios MTV Latinoamérica for Best Urban Artist|Best Urban Artist]] || {{won}}
|-
| 2009 || Calle 13 || [[Los Premios MTV Latinoamérica for Best Urban Artist|Best Urban Artist]] || {{won}}
{{end}}

'''Instituto Cubano de la Música'''
{{awards table}}
|-
|2010 || Calle 13 || Premio Internacional Cubadiscom || {{won}}
{{end}}

'''Ateneo Puertorriqueño'''
{{awards table}}
|-
|2011 || Calle 13 || Medalla Ramón Emeterio Betances || {{won}}
{{end}}

==See also==
{{Portal|Puerto Rico|Latin music|Music}}
*[[Music of Puerto Rico]]
*[[Alternative-reggaeton]]
{{clear}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
<references/>


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.lacalle13.com/''Calle 13 Official Website'']
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20130603234727/http://lacalle13.com/ Calle 13 official website]
* [http://www.urbanlyrics.com/c/calle13.html ''Calle 13 lyrics'']
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080517121334/http://www.rubenblades.com/sdrb/sdrb_14/ Rubén Blades interviewing Calle 13]
* [http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-calle2-2009aug02,0,593394.story Calle 13, in Search of the Real Latin America] by ''Los Angeles Times''
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMYJvwwlg64 Controversial "Querido FBI" Video]
* [http://theenvelope.latimes.com/la-et-calle-13-2aug2009,0,1487304.story Calle 13: With the People, Without a Map]

{{Calle 13}}
{{Navboxes
|title = Awards for Calle 13
|list =
{{Latin Grammy Award for Album of the Year}}
{{Latin Grammy Award for Record of the Year}}
{{Latin Grammy Award for Song of the Year}}
{{Latin Grammy Award for Best New Artist}}
{{Latin Grammy Award for Producer of the Year}}
{{Latin Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video}}
}}


{{Authority control}}
[[Category:Puerto Rican reggaeton artists]]


[[de:Calle 13]]
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[[es:Calle 13 (grupo)]]
[[Category:Calle 13 (band)| ]]
[[Category:Puerto Rican alternative rock groups]]
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[[Category:Grammy Award winners]]
[[Category:Latin Grammy Award winners]]
[[Category:Latin Grammy Award for Best New Artist]]
[[Category:Latin Grammy Award for Producer of the Year]]
[[Category:Musical trios]]
[[Category:Puerto Rican reggaeton musicians]]
[[Category:2004 establishments in Puerto Rico]]
[[Category:Musical groups established in 2004]]
[[Category:Puerto Rican independence activists]]
[[Category:Musical groups disestablished in 2015]]
[[Category:Puerto Rican hip-hop musicians]]
[[Category:American hip-hop groups]]
[[Category:Sony Music Latin artists]]
[[Category:2015 disestablishments in Puerto Rico]]

Latest revision as of 22:26, 13 December 2024

Calle 13
Calle 13 performing in Venezuela
Calle 13 performing in Venezuela
Background information
OriginTrujillo Alto, Puerto Rico
Genres
Years active2004–2015 (hiatus)
Labels
Members

Calle 13 is a Puerto Rican alternative hip-hop band formed by stepbrothers Residente (lead vocalist, songwriter) and Visitante (multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, beat producer), along with their half-sister iLe, also known as PG-13 (backing vocals).

Pérez and Cabra first were discovered by Elias De Leon. They were subsequently given a record deal with White Lion Records after leaving a demo with A&R Director Carlos "Karly" Rosario. After the song "Querido FBI" was released, the group gained attention in Puerto Rico. In 2005, Calle 13 released its eponymously titled debut album, which included the singles "Se Vale Tó-Tó" and "¡Atrévete-te-te!" and reached number 6 on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart. In 2007, the group released its second album, Residente o Visitante, which experimented with a wide variety of genres and reached number 1 on the Top Latin Albums chart. The album helped the group gain success throughout Latin America and win three Latin Grammys. The group released its third album, Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo, in 2008, which won Album of the Year at the 2009 Latin Grammy Awards. Calle 13 released Entren Los Que Quieran in November 2010 and its latest album, Multi Viral, on March 1, 2014.

Calle 13 is noted for its eclectic musical style, often using unconventional instrumentation in its music, which distances the group from the reggaeton genre. The band is also known for its satirical lyrics as well as social commentary about Latin American issues and culture. The stepbrothers are strong supporters of the Puerto Rican independence movement, a stance that has generated controversy.[2] For their work, the group has won twenty-one Latin Grammy Awards, holding the record for the most Latin Grammy wins. They have also won three Grammy Awards.

History

[edit]

2004–2005: early years

[edit]

Residente and Visitante met when they were both two years old, when Residente's mother married Visitante's father.[3] The family developed strong ties to the Puerto Rican arts community; Residente's mother, Flor Joglar de Gracia, was an actress in Teatro del Sesenta, a local acting troupe, while Visitante's father (who later became Residente's stepfather) is currently a lawyer, but at one time was a musician.[2] The duo asserts that they lived a relatively comfortable lifestyle growing up, as Residente places himself in a group of Puerto Ricans who are "too poor to be rich and too rich to be poor."[4] Although their parents later divorced, the stepbrothers remained close.[3] When they were children, Visitante would visit his brother at the Calle 13 (13th Street) of the El Conquistador subsection of Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico, every week. Since the subsection is a gated community, visitors were routinely asked "¿Residente o visitante?" ("Resident or visitor?") by a security guard when approaching the community's main gate.[2] Therefore, Visitante would identify himself as a visitor, while Residente would have to insist that he was a resident to clear the gate.[3] The pair named themselves Calle 13 after the street their family's house was on.[5] Before living there, they lived at Calle 11.[6]

Residente originally studied to be an accountant, and Visitante finished a computer science degree. An art course prompted Residente to pursue a career as a multimedia designer, and Visitante became a full-time musician and producer. Residente states that his degree in design has influenced his musical style: "What I used to do with my visual art is the same thing I do now with my lyrics. My songs are descriptive, very visual."[2] Besides this, Residente was a fan of what was then called "underground rap" in Puerto Rico, and started to earn a reputation as a lyricist (Residente says, with some embarrassment, that his moniker at the time was "El Déspota", or "The Despot"). Meanwhile, Visitante participated in Bayanga, a rock and Brazilian batucada group.[7] After Residente finished studying in Georgia at the Savannah College of Art and Design and earned a master of fine arts in animation, illustration, sequential art and film, he returned to Puerto Rico.[2] Soon after, both of them started working on their music. They claim they initially did it as a joke, but they still managed to get some of their songs heard throughout Puerto Rico.[7] They began recording music together in 2004, with the idea of hosting their work on a website, beginning with two demos ("La Tripleta" and "La Aguacatona").[3] Within a year, the duo began looking for a record label to distribute their music commercially. They decided to pursue a deal at White Lion Records, because Tego Calderón was on the label, whom the two admired.[3]

2005–2006: "Querido FBI" and Calle 13

[edit]

While their first album was being mixed, Filiberto Ojeda Ríos, leader of the Puerto Rican revolutionary group known as Los Macheteros, was killed in the course of arrest by the FBI.

Angered by the FBI's action, Residente wrote a song protesting against what had happened to Ojeda and asked his record label to allow the group to release it on the Internet through viral marketing through Indymedia Puerto Rico, an alternative news website.[8]

Public controversy about the song's lyrics ensured immediate attention from mainstream media in Puerto Rico. The song, according to critics, "redefined what a reggaeton vocalist's relationship to Puerto Rico should be."[9]

Visitante during Calle 13's first concert in Managua, Nicaragua.

Soon after this, the duo rose to fame in 2005 with two back-to-back hits on Puerto Rican radio stations: "Se Vale Tó-Tó" and "Atrevete-te-te!" Both songs were later included on their eponymously titled debut album, which was released on November 29, 2005.

After this rise to fame, the duo was sought by other reggaetón artists, and they collaborated with artists such as Voltio in the song "Ojalai" (also known as "Chulin Culin Chunfly", whose name is a minor variation of a song written by Mexican comedy writer Roberto Gómez Bolaños, of whose comedic characters Residente is a fan—by citing the name, Gómez Bolaños is legally a co-author of the song,[10]) and with the Three 6 Mafia in the remix, singing or co-writing songs. At the end of 2005, they finally released their album, which received great critical praise.

In 2006 the duo kept on working as they broke into a wider-music scene with at least two more smash hits that were played throughout Puerto Rico and U.S. Urban music radio and television stations, including the songs "Japón" ("Japan"), and "Suave" ("Soft/Slow"). The group had their first massive-venue concert on May 6, 2006, at the José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum in San Juan. They also toured Central and South America, playing "Atrévete-te-te" before an escola de samba in Venezuelan television, and also visiting, among others, Guatemala, Chile, Honduras and Colombia.[citation needed]

In light of the criticism directed towards the band, Calle 13 has become a cultural reference to be reckoned with in Puerto Rico. An example of this is the constant references made to the band and to Residente by satirical writer Fiquito Yunqué in the weekly pro-independence newspaper Claridad. Yunqué's columns sometimes feature Calle 13 lyrics as their titles, and Yunqué even introduced the band onstage at one of their live performances in Puerto Rico.

Acceptance of Calle 13's music even influenced the former Governor of Puerto Rico, Aníbal Acevedo Vilá who, in December 2005, admitted to listening to Calle 13 because his son had copied some of their songs to his iPod. Acevedo claimed that "songs such as Calle 13's were eye openers" to him. As a result, since the country had a chronic problem of people being unknowingly injured or killed by stray bullets fired to the air on New Year's Eve, Acevedo felt compelled to invite the duo to La Fortaleza and to have them record a song against shootings bullets in the air as a way of celebrating the holiday.[11]

The single, "Ley De Gravedad" (Law of Gravity) was released as part of a public-service campaign for that matter. Some political adversaries of Acevedo dismissed this as a trick to ingratiate himself with Puerto Rican youth and pro-independence advocates, and was criticized by the local press due to the fact that an artist who seemingly promoted violence with their "Querido FBI" song was now supposed to be a role model for anti-violence. However, the campaign was thought to be effective in reducing the injured, from twelve (and one death) the previous year, to three the year the campaign was run, though many members of the artistic community contributed to this effort in separate campaigns.[12]

2007: Residente o Visitante

[edit]

As the duo has risen to fame, other international artists of various genres have sought them. In 2006 and 2007, they recorded songs with Canadian Nelly Furtado and Spanish Alejandro Sanz. In their recent album, they feature contributions with such diverse groups like Orishas (a hip hop group whose members had emigrated from Cuba), Mexican Café Tacuba, Argentine Vicentico (from Los Fabulosos Cadillacs), and La Mala Rodríguez (from Spain), among others. On May 19, 2006, the band celebrated their first international concert, held in Panama City to a crowd of 5,000. During the summer of 2006 Calle 13 was featured on MTV's My Block: Puerto Rico. From September 15 – October 31 Calle 13 was Artist Speaking Tr3s on MTV Tr3s.

On November 2, 2006, the band won three Latin Grammys (Best New Artist; Best Urban Album; and Best Short Version Video, for the song "Atrévete-te-te"). They later filmed a video along with Voltio for "Chulín Culín Chunfly", where Residente, dressed as a priest and later as Bruce Lee, is given a severe beating by a gang.

On April 24, 2007, their second album Residente o Visitante was released. Tracks in the album were partially recorded in Puerto Rico and while on tour in Colombia, Argentina and Venezuela. While recording the album, Residente and Visitante took a trip to South America to explore areas populated by Latin America's indigenous and African-descended minorities. The duo was strongly influenced by the experience; Visitante discovered and purchased several new musical instruments on the trip including a quijada, a charango and a bombo legüero, all of which were used on the duo's song "Lllegale a Mi Guarida".[4]

Residente considered this album to be darker than the first, but also more introspective and biographical. The album garnered controversy for its sexual and religious overtones.[16] As part of the album, Calle 13 filmed the video for their first single off the album, "Tango del Pecado", on February 25, 2007.

Residente and PG-13 during the 34th. Support to Claridad Festival, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, April 24, 2008

In May 2007, the duo performed at Vive Latino, and the public answered them by throwing beer bottles filled with urine. In 2010, when taking part of the same festival, they were less bitterly welcomed.[6] In July 2007, Calle 13 teamed up with Julio Voltio to speak out against police brutality in Puerto Rico.[17] After recording a song titled "Tributo a la Policía", Calle 13 distributed the single free on the streets in front of the Police Headquarters of San Juan.

On November 8, 2007, Calle 13, along with Orishas, performed the song "Pa'l Norte" at the 8th Annual Latin Grammy Awards, held at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, Nevada. Their live performance featured the percussion/dance group Stomp. A troupe of dancers dressed in traditional Latin American garb and wearing bandannas in their faces (as if they were bandits) were also featured. Two members of the traditional Colombian folk cumbia band Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto, as well as members from an indigenous tribe local to the Gaiteros' hometown in northern Colombia, followed Residente to the stage at the beginning of the song. The subtext of the presentation was that Latin Americans were "invading the North" (the United States) and were there to stay.

Calle 13 earned two Latin Grammys later that night: "Best Urban Music Album" for Residente o Visitante and "Best Urban Song" for "Pal Norte".[18] They were nominated for two other categories,[19] the others being Best Short Form Music Video and Album of the Year. The Gaiteros de San Jacinto, who had also received a Grammy for their album Un Fuego de Sangre Pura, could only accept it when Calle 13 intervened to finance their trip to Las Vegas and obtain a temporary visa to visit the United States on their behalf.[20]

A later tour of the Americas had Calle 13 perform to sell-out crowds in Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Uruguay and Argentina. The band also performed in the United States, including an appearance at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival on April 27, 2008.

The band received all three possible audience acceptance awards when they performed at the 2008 Viña del Mar International Song Festival in Viña del Mar, Chile, taming the usually demanding crowd (traditionally nicknamed "El Monstruo", or "The Monster"—because of its fickleness—by Chilean media). They also performed to a sold-out crowd at Luna Park in Buenos Aires, Argentina. They finished their tour at the 34th Annual Claridad Support Festival in San Juan on April 24, 2008. Denise Quiñones joined the band onstage for their abbreviated song set.

Residente performing on August 29, 2009.

2008–2010: Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo

[edit]

On 2008, their "Atrévete-te-te" song was a featured track on the game Grand Theft Auto IV, playing in the lineup of the fictional San Juan Sounds radio station.

On October 9, 2008, Calle 13 participated in the "MTV Tr3s Pass Tour".[21]

In an interview done during the production of their third album, Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo, Calle 13 stated that the production would include songs discussing poverty.[22] The duo also noted that the production would include cumbia villera and "sounds from Eastern Europe".[22]

On October 21, 2008, the album was released. A series of songs off the album began to be released weekly as singles. Four singles were released: "Que Lloren" (September 16, 2008); "Electro Movimiento" (September 23, 2008); "Fiesta de Locos" (September 30, 2008); and "No Hay Nadie Como Tú", the latter featuring Café Tacuba. On August 11, 2009, the duo was invited to Ecuador by Rafael Correa's government, serving as guests in the local celebrations that commemorate the coup that began the Ecuadorian War of Independence. They played in Quito, performing in Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa for the first time, in an activity that included Nueva Canción: Argentina, León Gieco and speeches by Correa, Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, deposed president of Honduras Manuel Zelaya, Cuban president Raúl Castro and Nicaraguan president Daniel Ortega. During the performance Residente said that he wished Puerto Rico could be an independent country such as Ecuador.[23]

Pérez made a cameo appearance in the 2009 film Old Dogs, being cast to interpret a tattoo artist.[24]

On October 15, 2009, Calle 13 won the Premios MTV Latinoamérica for Best Urban Artist.[25] Pérez also served as host throughout the ceremony, using this exposure to insult Puerto Rican governor Luis Fortuño and comment about a civilian general strike that was organized earlier that day, held to protest the firing of more than 25,000 public employees by Fortuño's administration.[25] Pérez was criticised after referring to Fortuño as an "hijo de la gran puta".[26] The phrase is commonly translated as "son of a bitch", although the phrase places emphasis on the mother of the subject being a prostitute, which many found disrespectful to Fortuño's mother. Fortuño responded by saying "This individual disrespected all Puerto Rican women, all Puerto Rican mothers and the people of Puerto Rico in general."[26]

Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo was nominated in five categories for the 2009 Latin Grammy Awards winning all of them, including Album of the Year, Best Urban Album, Record of the Year and Best Alternative Song for the hit single "No Hay Nadie Como Tu" along with Café Tacuba, as well as Best Music Video (in Short Format) for "La Perla" featuring salsa artist Rubén Blades. The winners were announced on November 5, 2009, in a ceremony held at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.[27]

On March 23, 2010, the band performed their first concert in Cuba, the event was held at the José Martí Anti-Imperialist Plaza before an estimated crowd that ranged between 500,000 and 900,000 fans.[28][29] The band performed "No Hay Nadie Como Tú", "La Cumbia de los Aburridos", "Se Vale Tó-Tó", "La Hormiga Brava", "Un Beso de Desayuno", "Pa'l Norte", "Fiesta de Locos", "Querido FBI", "La Jirafa" and "Tango del Pecado", before adding "Electro Movimiento" and "Atrévete te-te" due to popular demand. During this event, Calle 13 received the international Cubadisco award from representatives of the Instituto Cubano de la Música (lit. Cuban Music Institute).[30] The group originally planned to participate in Paz Sin Fronteras II, but were unable to acquire visas in time.[31]

The band has also filmed a documentary. The film, Sin Mapa, is about their journeys through South America and the land's indigenous culture and art.[32] The movie became available on iTunes and DVD on July 28, 2010.

2010–2012: Entren Los Que Quieran

[edit]

Calle 13 released their latest album, Entren Los Que Quieran, on November 22, 2010.[33] The singles "Calma Pueblo" and "Vamo' a Portarnos Mal" have been released to the iTunes Store. Visitante explained that the title of the album means that "Everyone's invited to enter. If you don't want to, well don't."[33] He also stated that the album continues to experiment with different styles of music, with collaborations with Omar Rodríguez-López from The Mars Volta on "Calma Pueblo", giving the song a "Beastie Boys vibe". He stated that there would also be influences from Bollywood and South American rhythms.[33] The promotional tour for Entren Los Que Quieran featured over a hundred presentations in 2011, spanning most of Latin America and parts of Europe. Among the most notable being serving as the sole representation of Puerto Rico at the inauguration of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States and their performance at the 2011 Viña del Mar Festival, where Calle 13 decided to go against the event's rules, refusing further awards beyond a "Silver Torch" in order to avoid further interruption, despite being the most clamored artist in that night.[34] On November 19, 2011, the group offered a concert in El Salvador where the entrance gate was fully paid in rice and beans, the collected food was subsequently donated to flood victims in that country.[35] Pérez also remixed an exclusive version of "El Hormiguero" for four-time world boxing champion Miguel Cotto, who used it in his entrance prior to a successful title defense on December 3, 2011.

Upon release, the music video for "Calma Pueblo" generated controversy for its violence and full-frontal nudity, which the band claims is a metaphor for self-liberation.[36] The album received more nominations for the 12th Latin Grammy Awards than any other production that year. It went on to win nine categories in total "Album of the Year", "Best Urban Music Album" and "Producer of the Year" in general; "Best Urban Song" for "Baile de los Pobres"; "Best Tropical Song" for "Vamo' a Potarnos Mal"; "Best Short Form Music Video" for "Calma Pueblo"; "Song of the Year" and "Record of the Year" for "Latinoamérica".[37] Following this ceremony, Calle 13 emerged as the artist or group with most awards won in the event with 19, besting Juanes' 17. This accomplishment also shattered several records, including "Most Honored Album", "Most Latin Grammies won in one night" and increased their leadership in the "Most Latin Grammies won by a group" category to 13 more than their closest competitors.

In the press conference that followed, the group was interviewed by journalist Elvis Castillo of VENFM regarding his support to some elements of the Latin American left-wing. The journalist, a member of the conservative Venezuelan opposition, cited the work of local cartoonist Edo, a sketch of one of Pérez's characteristic black shirts scribbled with the phrase A Calle 13: No es lo mismo ver la Revolución como Visitante que como Residente (lit. "To Calle 13: It is not the same to see the Revolution as a Visitor as it is as a Resident") to question a supposed sympathy for Chavismo. Pérez disregarded that notion, stating that "[Calle 13] does not support any president, because when we support any president we stop belonging to the people." On June 22, 2011, Calle 13 performed at The Pachamama Peace Festival and supported the project together with 8 Latin American embassies as the Godparent of the Pachamama Project.

On December 22, 2011, the group received the Medalla Ramón Emeterio Betances from the Ateneo Puertorriqueño, the oldest cultural institution in Puerto Rico, as part of their Puerto Rican Flag Day celebrations. In the event, Pérez was heralded as the "Roberto Clemente of modern music" by host Luis Gutierrez, only to respond that he was "merely another member of [the Puerto Rican people] who decided to express [his] message". However, he admitted that being recognized in his motherland held more weight than any other award received during his career.[38]

2013–present: Multi Viral and hiatus

[edit]

On November 13, 2013, the group released the track and video "Multi Viral", which featured WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and Palestinian singer Kamilya Jubran on vocals and Tom Morello on guitar.[39][40][41]

In December 2013, they announced that their new album would be named Multi Viral and it would be followed by a Latin American tour, which saw the band performing in Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile, Venezuela, Colombia, Costa Rica and Mexico.[1] The album was released through their new own label, El Abismo,[1] since they decided not to continue their contract with Sony Music Latin.[42] The tour unofficially began at the University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras Campus in San Juan, where Calle 13 held an impromptu free concert on February 25, 2014. The event was announced only six days before and did not receive formal promotion.[43] The concert, which featured interludes where the group opposed a revision in the UPR's enrollment fee and allowed a low income child to voice the concerns of his community, managed to attract an estimate of 50,000 fans.[44][45] The event featured the live debut of "El Aguante", which opened the show.[46] Despite recognizing that his political ideology conflicted with the inmovilist conservative ideals of governor Alejandro García Padilla, Pérez accompanied the same child to a reunion in La Fortaleza the following day.[45]

In May 2014, the duo once again performed at Vive Latino. When they were playing "El Aguante", one spectator jumped onto the stage and tried to take Residente's microphone. Five security guards grabbed the invader and Residente tried to punch him.[6] The duo later issued a statement (with a fan-made video of the incident) in which they say Residente's punch never actually hit the aggressor.[47] They also included a video in which Residente is shown with the attacker sharing a drink and celebrating the fifth album.[47]

Following the end of their Multi_Viral world tour, Residente and Visitante went separate ways to focus on personal projects - the former would see the release of his first solo effort, Residente, in March 2017. In October 2018, Visitante premiered his new musical project "Trending Tropics", a collaboration with Dominican singer Vicente García.[48] Though at the time of his album's release some media outlets referred to Calle 13 as a defunct band,[49][50][51] Residente had previously said on multiple occasions that the band is not over and is just taking a break.[52]

Musical style

[edit]

Although most people have labeled Calle 13's music as reggaeton, the band has tried to distance itself from the style.[4] Indeed, Residente once admitted the group played reggaeton in their first album as way of gaining some initial popularity more easily, while assuring that the group has nothing against the genre.[6] Visitante, being a professional musician, tries to fuse diverse styles in the group's songs. Early cuts featured elements from jazz, bossa nova and salsa, while recent songs feature cumbia, tango, electronica and others. In their recent tours around Latin America they have added different musical elements according to the place the band is playing in, yet many of their songs carry the traditional reggaeton "Dem Bow" beat such as in their hit "Tango del Pecado" and the remix to "Suave".

Singer Residente is reluctant to label their music in a specific genre, instead calling it plain urban style. In an interview with Rueben Blades, Rene mentioned that he is wary of making generic hip hop and traditional reggaeton. He added that even though he welcomes the "urbanity" of Hip Hop, he does not consider it to be an authentic Latin American musical expression. On the other hand, he believes that reggaeton has become generic and watered down with pop aesthetics.[55] Calle 13 has maintained a healthy distance from the orthodoxy of reggaeton and both he and his brother justify it by saying that only three songs out of fifteen songs in their eponymous debut album, as well as four out of fifteen songs in their album Residente o Visitante, feature reggaetón beats.[5] Residente said of the group's musical style "I love to mix things up, like on our song 'La Jirafa’. We have drumming from Brazil combined with the theme music from the film Amélie. It's a pretty song, a love song for a woman, but it's about Puerto Rico too. I think this why people like our music, because – sexually speaking or politically speaking – it's just very genuine."[56]

Residente performing in Veracruz, Mexico on August 29, 2009.

Residente's lyrical style is inspired partly by the lyrical approach used by artists such as Vico C and Tego Calderón, trying to minimize what they refer to as "clichés" of the genre -such as open confrontations with other rappers, known in Spanish as tiradera (pronounced [tiɾaˈeɾa] in Puerto Rican dialect). He attempts to stray away from the "wannabe gangster aesthetic" typical of reggaeton music.[4] Residente's trademark is a lyrical style full of sarcasm, satire, parody and shock value, which some critics and fans have likened to Eminem's.[3] Jason Birchmeier of AllMusic writes that Residente's lyrical style and delivery "eschews reggaeton's clichés, showcasing a healthy sense of humor and an almost clownish approach to sarcasm ... A world apart from the kingly bravado of most reggaeton vocalists, not to mention the obligatory glimmers of misogyny and violence that accompany such streetwise swaggering."[3] Residente also utilizes Puerto Rican slang considerably (which in turn incorporates a sizeable dose of Spanglish), as well as allegory. Early in his career, Residente expressed a desire to write lyrics only in Spanish, however he has recently stated that he will begin to write more lyrics in English in order to help communicate with English-speaking listeners.[56]

Residente's lyrics treat a wide and eclectic variety of subjects. He mentions (and sometimes derides) celebrities and icons such as Mickey Mouse, Redman, and 2Pac, in "Tengo Hambre" (I'm Hungry); 50 Cent in "La Crema" (The Cream); Madonna ("I mean, Maradona", Residente says) in "Sin Exagerar" (Without Exaggeration); Puerto Rican singer Nydia Caro (rather affectionately) in "La Era de la Copiaera", wrestler Abdullah the Butcher in "Tributo a la Policía" (A Tribute to Police), golfer Tiger Woods in "Baile de los Pobres" ("Dance of the Poor") he also made a diss track to Diddy in the song "Pi-Di-Di-Di (La Especialidad de la Casa)" (House Specialty) and a diss track aimed at the Federal Bureau of Investigation in "Querido FBI" (Dear FBI).

Visitante, on the other hand, is strongly influenced by electronica, world music, and particularly Latin American folk and popular music. He has also said that he is influenced by music from Central Europe such as Fanfare Ciocarlia (particularly its collaboration with Romani band Kaloome, also known as The Gypsy Kings and Queens) and Emir Kusturica's group, The No Smoking Orchestra. He also stated that his musician father introduced the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix to him at a young age, which has greatly influenced his music.[57] In live presentations, Visitante can be seen playing a variety of instruments: an electric guitar, synthesizers, an accordion, a melodica, a Puerto Rican cuatro and a theremin.

Members

[edit]

Recording members

Touring members

  • Andrés Cruz – drums
  • Héctor Barez – congas
  • Arturo Verges – trombone
  • Víctor Vázquez – saxophone
  • Ismael Cancel – drums
  • Jonathan González – bass guitar
  • Jerry D Medina – trumpet
  • Michael Santana – clarinet

Discography

[edit]

Awards and nominations

[edit]

Grammy Awards

Year Nominee / work Award Result
2008 Residente o Visitante Best Latin Urban Album Won
2010 Los de Atras Vienen Conmigo Best Latin Rock, Alternative or Urban Album Won
2012 Entren Los Que Quieran Best Latin Pop, Rock or Urban Album Nominated
2015 Multi Viral Best Latin Rock, Urban or Alternative Album Won[58]

Latin Grammy Awards

Year Nominee / work Award Result
2006 Calle 13 Best New Artist Won
Calle 13 Best Urban Music Album Won
"Atrévete-te-te" Best Short Form Music Video Won
2007 Residente o Visitante Album of the Year Nominated
Residiente o Visitante Best Urban Music Album Won
"Pa'l Norte" (feat Orishas) Best Urban Song Won
"Tango del Pecado" Best Short Form Music Video Nominated
2009 Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo Album of the Year Won
Los de Atrás Vienen Conmigo Best Urban Music Album Won
"No Hay Nadie Como Tu" (featuring Café Tacuba) Record of the Year Won
"No Hay Nadie Como Tu" (featuring Café Tacuba) Best Alternative Song Won
"La Perla" (featuring Rubén Blades) Best Short Form Music Video Won
2011 Entren Los Que Quieran Album of the Year Won
Entren Los Que Quieran Best Urban Music Album Won
"Latinoamérica" (featuring Totó la Momposina, Susana Baca and Maria Rita) Record of the Year Won
"Latinoamérica" Song of the Year Won
"Calma Pueblo" Best Alternative Song Won
"Baile de los Pobres" (featuring Rafa Arcaute) Best Urban Song Won
"Vamo' a Portarnos Mal" Best Tropical Song Won
Rafael Arcaute and Calle 13 Producer of the Year Won
"Calma Pueblo" Best Short Form Music Video Won
2014 Multi Viral Album of the Year Nominated
Multi Viral Best Urban Music Album Won
"Respira el Momento" Record of the Year Nominated
"Ojos Color Sol" (feat Silvio Rodríguez) Song of the Year Nominated
"El Aguante" Best Alternative Song Won
"Adentro" Best Urban Song Nominated
"Cuando los Pies Besan el Piso" Best Urban Song Nominated
"Adentro" Best Urban Performance Nominated
"Adentro" Best Short Form Music Video Nominated
2015 "Ojos Color Sol" (feat Silvio Rodríguez) Best Short Form Music Video Won
"Así de Grandes Son las Ideas" Best Short Form Music Video Nominated

Billboard Latin Music Awards

Year Nominee / work Award Result
2007 Calle 13 Best Reggaeton Album Nominated
2009 "No Hay Nadie Como Tu" Hot Latin Song of the Year Vocal Duet or Collaboration Nominated

Lo Nuestro Awards

Year Nominee / work Award Result
2008 "Pa'l Norte" Video of the Year Nominated
2009 "Un Beso de Desayuno" Video of the Year Nominated
2010 "No Hay Nadie Como Tu" Collaboration of the Year Nominated

Los Premios MTV Latinoamérica

Year Nominee / work Award Result
2006 Calle 13 Promising Artist Won
2007 Calle 13 Best Urban Artist Won
2009 Calle 13 Best Urban Artist Won

Instituto Cubano de la Música

Year Nominee / work Award Result
2010 Calle 13 Premio Internacional Cubadiscom Won

Ateneo Puertorriqueño

Year Nominee / work Award Result
2011 Calle 13 Medalla Ramón Emeterio Betances Won

See also

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References

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