meta-script2025 Latin GRAMMYs: Best Music For Visual Media Nominations | GRAMMY.com
A graphic promoting the 2025 Latin GRAMMYs. The graphic feature to words "NOMINATIONS 2025" and the Latin GRAMMYs and Latin Recording Academy logos.
The 2025 Latin GRAMMYs take place Thursday, Nov. 13, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

Graphic courtesy of the Latin Recording Academy

List

2025 Latin GRAMMYs: Best Music For Visual Media Nominations

The 2025 Latin GRAMMYs, held Nov. 13, will feature a new category recognizing original music created to accompany movies, television series, video games, and other visual media.

GRAMMYs/Sep 17, 2025 - 01:12 pm

The 2025 Latin GRAMMYs will feature two new categories this year, including Best Music for Visual Media. This category, part of the newly created Visual Media area, will recognize composers of original works created not only to accompany films, series, documentaries, or video games, but to enhance their narrative and provide emotional weight to the production. 

The first nominees in this category are: Pedro Osuna for the soundtrack to the series "Cada Minuto Cuenta," Camilo Sanabria for the soundtrack to the series "Cien Años de Soledad," Federico Jusid for the soundtrack to the series "El Eternauta," Eduardo Cabra for the soundtrack to the film "In The Summers," and Gustavo Santaolalla for the soundtrack to the series "Pedro Páramo."

Like the Best Traditional Roots Song category, Best Music for Visual Media was unanimously approved by the Latin Recording Academy’s Board and incorporated into the Awards Process in March. With these two additions, the Latin GRAMMYs will present a total of 60 categories at the 26th annual ceremony.

"The membership’s acceptance [of this category] was very strong, and not just membership, but from visual content generation studios and video game companies," Luis Dousdebes, Chief Awards, Membership and Preservation Officer of the Latin Recording Academy, tells GRAMMY.com. 

Approximately 140 submissions were received for the inaugural edition, from which five nominees were selected. The category, says Dousdebes, reflects the constant evolution of the Latin GRAMMYs and their adaptation to the industry’s pace. "We’re not deaf to the requirements of a community that evolves, and that’s why we keep growing. Since music is so dynamic, we have to stay alert and very present in that evolution."

Below, learn more about the inaugural nominees for Best Music for Visual Media category. Be sure to tune into the 2025 Latin GRAMMYs on Thursday, Nov. 13, at 8 p.m. ET/PT (7 p.m. CT) on Univision, Galavisión and ViX to see who wins. 

"Cada Minuto Cuenta" (Original Prime Video Series Soundtrack)

Pedro Osuna, composer

Inspired by the deadly Sept. 19, 1985, earthquake that shook Mexico City and left thousands dead, "Cada Minuto Cuenta" is a Prime Video series. Across two seasons of 10 episodes each, "Cada Minuto Cuenta" portrays the story of rescue teams who worked against the clock to rescue as many people alive as possible from the rubble.

Osuna aims to create timeless music, essentially because his productions reflect stories that must remain "forever" in collective memory, as the composer noted in 2023 to Argentine outlet Canal de la Ciudad. For "Cada Minuto Cuenta," Osuna created 25 tracks that reflect pain, death, but also the hope of life amid the natural disaster that forever changed life in Mexico.

Based in Los Angeles, Osuna studied piano and composition at the Granada Conservatory. In 2019, he graduated summa cum laude with honors from Berklee College of Music, winning the Rick Applin Prize for Best Fugue and the Georges Delerue Prize for Film Score. In 2021, he became the youngest musician to orchestrate a James Bond film, No Time To Die, working alongside Michael Giacchino. His credits also include soundtracks for Lightyear and Thor: Love and Thunder.

1985 holds a special magnetism for Spanish composer Pedro Osuna, who is also known for his work on the Oscar-nominated and Golden Globe-winning film Argentina, 1985

"Cien Años De Soledad" (Netflix Series Soundtrack)

Camilo Sanabria, composer

Bringing one of the most significant classic works of Hispanic literature to the small or big screen was no simple task. Even less so, building a visual and sonic universe that would perfectly capture the world that the late Colombian writer and Nobel Prize in Literature winner Gabriel García Márquez constructed in 1967 over 469 pages of Cien Años de Soledad (One Hundred Years of Solitude).

For the challenge, Netflix enlisted one of its regular collaborators, Colombian composer Camilo Sanabria, and musician and researcher Juancho Valencia. Together, they orchestrate the story of the Buendía family, as well as the music that brings life to Macondo, the fictional town created by García Márquez, where the entire story unfolds.

Valencia told Colombian newspaper El Espectador that creating the soundtrack involved rigorous research, as he focused on crafting musical pieces that would be appropriate for the era in which the story takes place, specifically 1860. This investigative work resulted in a 36-track soundtrack for the eight episodes of Netflix’s first season. The complexity and richness of the Colombian Caribbean (where Macondo would be located if it existed) are reflected in genres like gaita, cumbia, drums, and, of course, vallenato.

Beyond the musical component, Sanabria incorporated natural elements into an impeccable sound design through Caribbean fauna and nature, which allowed viewers to fully immerse themselves in mid-19th century Colombia. 

Sanabria is known for his work on films such as Alias María, Amazona, Birds of Passage, and Salvador, as well as TV series like "Rosario Tijeras" and "Thousand Fangs." 

"El Eternauta" (Netflix Series Soundtrack)

Federico Jusid, composer

The story of "El Eternauta" has enjoyed a fervent following in Argentina since the late 1950s, when the science fiction comic was originally published. Nearly 70 years later, Netflix adapted this story for television.

The series centers on the story of a post-apocalyptic Buenos Aires, where a rare and deadly toxic snowfall annihilates much of the city’s population. The series was a hit in Argentina, as well as in countries as distant as South Korea. One aspect that helped connect with the story, regardless of the viewer’s language, is the music, composed by Argentine composer Federico Jusid. The veteran musician — who was also the musician behind the Oscar-winning film El secreto de sus ojos — found in his work on "El Eternauta" the perfect excuse to reconnect with his roots.

Jusid savored in the process of capturing Argentine idiosyncrasy in his score. "What was original for me was showing it at a sonic level so that it specifically doesn't sound like a generic apocalypse movie," Jusid told newspaper La Nación.

To create this musical passage, Jusid relied on typical classical orchestration, but also incorporated objects such as boxes, furniture, and even a boat inflator as ingredients in the perfect — and at times indecipherable — auditory and musical narrative that accompanies the story. 

Jusid is known in the industry for his composition work on series such as "A Thousand Blows," "A Gentleman in Moscow" and "The English." The approach that distinguishes him is working right at the margins, so that he can, musically speaking, align with both the script and the story being told, as well as the characters his work will accompany. 

In The Summers

Eduardo Cabra, composer

Behind the soundtrack of In The Summers is a familiar name in Latin music: 24-time Latin GRAMMY winner Eduardo Cabra, known to many as "Visitante" from the Puerto Rican hip-hop Latin GRAMMY and GRAMMY-winning group Calle 13.

Starring his brother, René Pérez (Residente), the film tells the story of the tumultuous relationship between two young women and their father, Vicente (Pérez), as they spend summers together in Las Cruces, New Mexico. 

Composed by Cabra, with lyrics by Sebastián Otero, the soundtrack is divided into four acts that capture tension and nostalgia through incidental music, as well as the songs that open each act, created specifically to accompany the plot. 

Following his time with Calle 13, Eduardo Cabra has distinguished himself in the Latin music industry through his masterful production, recognized in 2024 with the Latin GRAMMY for Producer Of The Year for his work on albums like Alkemi by Daymé Arocena and Esta Vida Que Elegí by st. Pedro, Manual de Romería by Rodrigo Cuevas, and songs like "Miel" by Rawayana feat. Rafa Pabön and Cabra, "Bachaqué" by Mima, and "Malabar" by Seba Otero feat. Irepelusa. 

Pedro Páramo (Netflix Soundtrack)

Gustavo Santaolalla, composer

A titan of music and composition, 17-time Latin GRAMMY winner and 2023 Latin Recording Academy Trustees Award recipient Gustavo Santaolalla was tasked with creating the musical score for the small-screen adaptation of one of Latin American literature’s classic works, "Pedro Páramo."

Juan Rulfo’s novel, published nearly 70 years ago, is deeply rooted in Mexican culture and its relationship with death. The novel follows the story of Juan Preciado: a man who promises his dying mother that he will search for his father. 

This search leads Preciado to Comala, a ghost town inhabited by spectral characters. This is where Santaolalla’s composition shines, as he builds an atmosphere that critics have described as dreamlike through the use of a minimalistic score and dissonance. 

Timid and melancholic strings serve as the guiding thread of this work, giving the production a spiritual and even esoteric character. 

Santaolalla is known for his soundtracks for Brokeback Mountain and Babel, for which he won Oscars, as well as his work on the video game and its TV adaptation, "The Last of Us," and iconic Latin films like Amores Perros.

A graphic promoting the Recording Academy's celebration of Music In Our Schools Month. The graphic features a photo of a students with instruments in a classroom. The words "March Is" are written in red font and "Music In Our Schools Month" in white.
The Grammy organization is celebrating Music In Our Schools Month this March. The organization provides year-round learning, networking, and professional development opportunities through curated programming, immersive initiatives, mentorship and scholarship programs, and advocacy.

Graphic Courtesy of The Grammy Organization

List

6 Ways The Grammy Organization Champions Music Education & Professional Development Year-Round

From mentorships and scholarships to immersive programming, here's how the Grammy organization supports working professionals and emerging creatives through year-round music education and professional development.

GRAMMYs/Mar 12, 2026 - 10:04 pm

During her acceptance speech at the 2026 Grammys, Laufey delivered one of the most inspiring calls to action in Grammy history. Accepting the Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album for A Matter Of Time, the Icelandic singer/songwriter gave a massive thanks to all the music educators around the world.

"I owe everything to my music education, to my arts education," she passionately said from the Grammy stage. "We cannot cut arts funding. It's so important. What you all do here is so important."

Much like Laufey, the Grammy organization strongly champions the power of music education and professional development. To mark Music In Our Schools Month this March, the organization that provides year-round learning, networking, and professional development is spotlighting the life-changing impact of music learning, honoring music educators, and elevating the next generation of creators and industry professionals through curated programs and immersive initiatives. The organization's commitment to music education supports the entire music ecosystem — from classroom to career — and ensures emerging leaders are prepared to shape the future of music.

"For me, both music education and professional development are the same: It all points to continuing education," Dr. Chelsey Green, Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Recording Academy, told the Grammy organization in an exclusive interview for the Gramophone newsletter. "Staying on top of your development is the holistic education needed to be as rounded and healthy as an artist as you can, especially as so many independent artists are emerging and sustaining their careers independently."

Here are six essential ways the Grammy organization and its affiliates support working professionals and emerging artists and leaders through year-round music education and professional development.

Investing In The Next Generation Through Mentorship & Career Access

The Grammy organization provides access to mentorship programs, internships, workshops, scholarships, and networking opportunities to ensure that music's next biggest stars and industry leaders are equipped with the tools, knowledge, and networks they need to thrive.

Grammy U & The Grammy U Mentorship Program

Grammy U is the Grammy organization's premier membership program for the emerging music community, designed to help aspiring creators and professionals launch their careers. One of its flagship initiatives, the annual Grammy U Mentorship Program Presented by Amazon Music connects eligible Grammy U members with Recording Academy members for a six-month mentorship session, during which participants build relationships that often extend well beyond the program, with some mentees landing their first industry roles through the Grammy U Mentorship Program.

In celebration of Music In Our Schools Month, the Grammy U Mentorship Program will continue to host virtual programming for mentees this month, as well as Grammy U Mentorship Mixers across Chapters nationwide.

Leading Ladies of Entertainment Mentorship Program & Symposium

Created by the Latin Recording Academy in 2016, the Leading Ladies of Entertainment initiative bridges the gender gap in the music industry by honoring influential women and empowering future leaders. Paying-it-forward and forging opportunities for future generations is a core pillar of this initiative, and in 2021, the Latin Grammy Cultural Foundation established its Mentorship Program, where  past honorees and industry professionals provide personalized guidance to selected mentees over three months, offering insights into entrepreneurship, branding, career navigation, and leadership. Applications for the fifth cohort of the Leading Ladies of Entertainment Mentorship Program are open now through Monday, April 6.

In March 2026, the initiative launched its inaugural Leading Ladies of Entertainment Symposium, an inspiring, all-day gathering focused on mentorship, leadership, networking, and the advancement of women in music.

Opening Doors Through Scholarships & Financial Support

The Grammy organization actively works to remove barriers to opportunity via its various scholarship programs, which ensure talented students can pursue their dreams without financial limitations standing in the way.

Your Future Is Now

Presented by Amazon Music and the Recording Academy's Black Music Collective (BMC), the Your Future Is Now scholarship program awards scholarships and hands-on, immersive professional development experiences to students attending Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). The program will return for its fifth year in 2026.

Quinn Coleman Memorial Scholarship

Established in 2021 in honor of late music executive and DJ Quinn Coleman, the Quinn Coleman Memorial Scholarship, presented by the Grammy organization and Grammy Museum, provides professional development and resources that prepare students for full-time careers in music; resources include scholarships, stipends, wellness seminars, and internship opportunities at the Recording Academy or Latin Recording Academy.

Latin Grammy Cultural Foundation Scholarships

The Latin Grammy Cultural Foundation is a global champion of music education and empowers communities through Latin music and culture. For over a decade, the Foundation has fostered the next generation of Latin music creators through scholarships, education programs and grants that advance Latin music, such as:

  • The Prodigy Scholarship, also known as the 2026 Noel Schajris Scholarship, which offers financial support toward a bachelor's degree at Berklee College of Music for the 2026 fall semester

  • Gifted Tuition Scholarships awarded to students to cover tuition and housing costs, as well as wrap-around services provided by the Foundation, toward a four-year bachelor's degree at the institution of their choice

  • Several Tuition Assistance Scholarships, which offer financial support to students pursuing or starting a degree in music in the 2026 fall semester

Learn more about and apply to the Latin Grammy Cultural Foundation scholarship programs.

Immersive Learning: Real-World Industry Experiences

Professional development comes alive when students and rising professionals step into real music spaces and attain real-world experiences from working artists and executives. Here are a few examples the Grammy organization provides:

Grammy Camp

The music industry's only summer camp dedicated to delivering direct, real-world insight from working music makers, Grammy Camp is a national summer program for high school students. Led by Grammy winners, Grammy nominees, and music industry professionals, the program provides hands-on training and insider access across multiple disciplines — from performance and songwriting to production and music business.

Presented by the Grammy Museum, Grammy Camp is expanding to four U.S. cities for the 2026 summer season: Nashville, Miami, Los Angeles, and New York City.

Grammy In The Schools

The Grammy Museum's Grammy In The Schools program is a regional music industry career day, presented in partnership with a local Recording Academy Chapter, that provides insight to high school students about diverse career options in the music industry and direction on how to prepare for them.

The Grammy In The Schools Music Industry Career Day program connects high school students with Grammy winners, Grammy nominees, and working professionals across disciplines, offering candid conversations about what it takes to build a sustainable career in music. The program also features keynote panels as well as hands-on, interactive workshops where students can learn about producing a track, writing a song, and navigating the industry.

For Music In Our Schools Month, Grammy In The Schools 2026, in partnership with the Recording Academy's New York Chapter, heads to New Haven, Connecticut, this month for a day of hands-on learning and interactive sessions.

Professional Development & Networking At Every Stage

The Grammy organization prioritizes professional development for its members, as well as the creative community and the music industry at large, throughout the year, providing hands-on access to career pathways across the industry and helping emerging professionals build the networks and skills that shape long-term careers.

The Los Angeles Chapter's NEXT Class program, founded in 2014, provides real-life experiences and mentorship and networking opportunities for emerging Recording Academy members as they begin their paths as future leaders of the music industry.

The monthly Level Up series, one of the Grammy organization's many exclusive membership programs, engages Recording Academy members through purposeful programming focused on professional development and member networking. For Music In Our Schools Month, the Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C. Chapters will collaboratively host a special edition of Level Up featuring Education Committee Members discussing music and health spaces.

In 2024, the Grammy organization established the Music Education & Professional Development Committee (MEPD), a hub to centralize its efforts and facilitate collaboration regarding education and professional development initiatives across the Recording Academy and its affiliates. Currently led by Co-Chairs and industry executives Nikisha Bailey and Riggs Morales, the MEPD Committee amplifies the organization's mentorship and education initiatives for its collective +29,000 members across its Chapters, Wings and affiliates, including Grammy U, the Grammy Museum, MusiCares, the Latin Recording Academy, and the Latin Grammy Cultural Foundation. The MEPD Committee includes Recording Academy members from across the country and activates locally at each of the Academy's 12 Chapters and on a national level.

Honoring The Educators Who Inspire The Next Generation

Every year, the Grammy organization proudly celebrates music educators through awards that spotlight the changemakers shaping the future of music and ensuring the impact and longevity of music education in the classroom.

Music Educator Award

Presented by the Recording Academy and the Grammy Museum, the Music Educator Award honors current educators who have made a significant contribution to music education while demonstrating a deep commitment to ensuring music education remains a vital part of school communities.

Jennifer Jimenez, of South Miami Senior High School in Miami, Florida, received the 2026 Music Educator Award; she was honored at the annual Special Merit Awards ceremony in January during Grammy Week 2026.

Applications for the 2027 Music Educator Award are now open. Nominations are due March 15, 2026. Applications are due March 31, 2026.

Latin Music Educator Award

In 2025, the Latin Recording Academy, in partnership with the Latin Grammy Cultural Foundation, launched the Latin Music Educator Award to honor educators from the global music community who are making a significant impact by incorporating Latin music into their curriculum.

Luciana Ortega, of the Instituto Santa María de San Carlos in Chile, was honored with the inaugural Latin Music Educator Award during Latin Grammy Week 2025 last November.

The Impact Of Music Education: By The Numbers

The Grammy organization's commitment to music education and professional development is reflected not only in its programs, but in the thousands of lives they impact every year. Here's a look at the organization's impact on music education and professional development by the numbers:

Grammy Museum (in the last year alone)

  • 18,000: Number of K-12 students who attended a workshop, field trip, or program at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles

  • +38,000: Number of students and teachers who were impacted by 446 music education programs and initiatives at the Grammy Museum and across the country

  • $200,000: The amount awarded in grants for music research and sound preservation by the Grammy Museum

  • In 2025, the Grammy Museum announced free youth admission (17 and under), generously underwritten by the Stengaard Gross Family Education Initiative

Grammy U

  • +8,000: The amount of Grammy U members worldwide

  • +2,000: Participants in the current Grammy U Mentorship Program Presented by Amazon Music

  • +130: Programs in 2025

  • 700: Schools with members represented in Grammy U

Latin Grammy Cultural Foundation

  • +$15 million: The amount the Foundation has awarded to students, schools, music programs, musicologists, and researchers from around the world to date

  • New programs launched by the Foundation in 2025

    • Leading Ladies of Entertainment Fireside Chat  

    • Emerging Talent Spotlight  

    • Latin Grammy In The Schools Learning Session and After School

Recording Academy staffers and guests attend the Crear Música: Elevating Culture, Empowering Community event on Nov. 12, 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Recording Academy staffers and guests attend the Crear Música: Elevating Culture, Empowering Community event on Nov. 12, 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Photo: Monica Schipper/Getty Images for The Latin Recording Academy

Event Recaps

How The Recording Academy's Crear Música Network Is Empowering Latin Creators & Elevating The Global Latin Music Industry

Officially launched during Latin GRAMMY Week 2025, the Recording Academy's Crear Música network is expanding opportunity, access, and visibility for Latin creators across the global music landscape.

GRAMMYs/Nov 25, 2025 - 07:16 pm

This month, the Recording Academy reached a groundbreaking milestone with the official launch of Crear Música, the newest wing of the Academy's DREAM (Diversity Reimagined by Engaging All Music-People) Network, which uplifts and connects Latin creators across the music industry.

Held at CHICA at the Venetian Resort Las Vegas during Latin GRAMMY Week 2025, the launch event marked a landmark celebration that brought together artists, executives, community leaders, and Latin GRAMMY nominees for a morning that blended connection, conversation, and live performance all centered on one idea: music as a bridge between cultures.

Part of the Recording Academy's DREAM Network, an inclusive network of member resource groups spotlighting the contributions and initiatives of creators and professionals from diverse cultural backgrounds, Crear Música reflects the Academy's ongoing commitment to inclusion and cultural representation. Developed in partnership with the Recording Academy's Los Angeles Chapter, the Latin Recording Academy, and SESAC Latina, the program underscored a shared goal: expanding opportunity, access, and visibility for Latin creators across the global music landscape.

During his opening remarks, Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason jr. spoke about the importance of this collaboration — ensuring that Latin music is not only celebrated during GRAMMY season, but supported year-round through meaningful engagement and equitable opportunity.

"Our goal has always been to make sure the Academy reflects the world of music it represents," Mason jr. said in his speech. "That means amplifying Latin creators, building bridges with our partners at the Latin Recording Academy, and continuing to grow a membership that's as diverse and dynamic as the music itself."

Recording Academy staffers and guests attend the Crear Música: Elevating Culture, Empowering Community event on Nov. 12, 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Recording Academy staffers and guests attend the Crear Música: Elevating Culture, Empowering Community event on Nov. 12, 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada | Photo: Monica Schipper/Getty Images for The Latin Recording Academy

Event guests enjoyed a Latin-inspired menu curated by Chef Lorena García, whose culinary artistry at CHICA reflected the same vibrancy and storytelling spirit celebrated on stage. Chef Lorena also shared heartfelt remarks about the power of art. She spoke about the deep connection between music and cooking, two creative languages that tell stories. Welcoming nominees and guests with warmth, she reminded the room, "Esta es tu casa y este es tu día" ("This is your home and this is your day"), emphasizing that music "connects us all as Latinos — as artists and as dreamers."

The program featured a moving performance by Nic, whose soulful set embodied the heart of Crear Música: authenticity, emotion, and cultural pride. Her performance transformed the room into a shared space of reflection and joy, reminding attendees that music remains one of the world's most powerful storytellers.

Nic performs at the Crear Música: Elevating Culture, Empowering Community event on Nov. 12, 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada

Nic performs at the Crear Música: Elevating Culture, Empowering Community event on Nov. 12, 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada | Photo by Monica Schipper/Getty Images for The Latin Recording Academy

Before the performance, Qiana Conley, Senior Executive Director of the Recording Academy's Los Angeles Chapter, delivered remarks on the importance of mentorship, collaboration, and the Chapter's role in bridging the Recording Academy and Latin Recording Academy communities, particularly through dual membership and local engagement.

"Crear Música is more than a celebration, it's a commitment," Conley said. "For the first time, all Latin Recording Academy Voting Members were invited to join the Recording Academy, an important step toward a more inclusive and representative membership body."

A Commitment To The Future

As one of the eight DREAM Network groups, Crear Música serves as the Recording Academy's dedicated hub for Latin creators. Its mission is to strengthen ties between the Recording Academy and Latin Recording Academy, build professional pathways, empower and elevate Latin voices in music culture, and celebrate the diversity and excellence that define Latin music today.

The Crear Música event signaled a new chapter, one in which visibility meets action and cultural celebration becomes a sustained commitment.

"This is just the beginning," Ricky Lyon, Director of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI) for the Recording Academy, said in his opening remarks. "We're building something that lasts far beyond Latin GRAMMY Week — a year-round movement that ensures every creator feels seen, supported, and part of the story."

Recording Academy staffers and guests attend the Crear Música: Elevating Culture, Empowering Community event on Nov. 12, 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada

Recording Academy staffers and guests attend the Crear Música: Elevating Culture, Empowering Community event on Nov. 12, 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada | Photo by Monica Schipper/Getty Images for The Latin Recording Academy

About Crear Música

Part of the Recording Academy's DREAM Network (Diversity Reimagined by Engaging All Music-People), Crear Música is a community-based initiative designed to connect and empower Latin creators and professionals across the industry through opportunity, mentorship, and storytelling that reflects the depth and impact of Latin music worldwide.

About The DREAM Network

The DREAM Network is the Recording Academy's inclusion engine, designed to amplify underrepresented voices, expand access, and build equity across the music ecosystem. Through eight community networks and emerging leadership programs, the DREAM Network ensures that every creator has space to be seen, heard, and supported. The DREAM Network is composed of eight priority resource groups:

  • Women in the Mix: To build a community for all women and increase representation within the Recording Academy and in the music industry.

  • Black Music Collective: Dedicated to the inclusion, recognition, and advancement of Black music and its creators and professionals.

  • GRAMMYs Next Gen: Supports and empowers the next generation of music creators and professionals.

  • Academy Proud: Positions the GRAMMY organization as the LGBTQIA+ inclusion leader for our members and the music community at large.

  • Gold Music Alliance: Fosters meaningful connections and elevates the impact of Pan-Asian members and allies within the GRAMMY organization and the music industry.

  • Crear Música: Celebrates the Latino culture, develops members, and positively impacts the music community.

  • Indigenous Peoples Network: Develops a global community contributing to the preservation and honoring of Indigenous peoples and their traditions in music.

  • RAA+D (Recording Academy Accessibility and Disability): A commitment beyond compliance by achieving true accessibility for everyone in our music community.

Learn more about Crear Música and the Recording Academy's Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI) initiatives, recent DEI achievements, and year-round work to support artists, creators and music professionals of all backgrounds.

Bad Bunny accepts the Latin GRAMMY Award for Album Of The Year for 'DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS' onstage at the 2025 Latin GRAMMYS on Thursday, Nov. 13, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Bad Bunny accepts the Latin GRAMMY Award for Album Of The Year for 'DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS' onstage at the 2025 Latin GRAMMYS on Thursday, Nov. 13, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images for The Latin Recording Academy

Acceptance Speech

2025 Latin GRAMMYS: Bad Bunny Wins Album Of The Year For 'DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS'

"Never stop dreaming and being yourselves; never forget where you come from. There are many ways to serve your country; we chose music," the superstar said while accepting his first Album Of The Year Latin GRAMMY.

GRAMMYs/Nov 14, 2025 - 04:47 am

Bad Bunny finally conquered the coveted Album Of The Year category at the 2025 Latin GRAMMYS — and did so with his most political album to date.

DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS earned the Puerto Rican singer his fifth and final win of the night, bringing Benito to a career total of 17. Following the Biggest Night in Latin Music, Bad Bunny is now one of the most-awarded artists in Latin GRAMMYS history.

On DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS ("I Should Have Taken More Photos"), the artist born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio pays tribute to his native Puerto Rico — not only through an array of genres, such as salsa, but also through the figure of the jíbaro, a Puerto Rican cultural symbol.

"I want to dedicate this award to all the children and young people of Latin America, and especially those from Puerto Rico," said Bad Bunny upon receiving the award, also dedicating the Latin GRAMMY to a new generation of Puerto Rican artists such as Rai Nao, Dei V, Omar Courtz, Chuwi, among others.

"Never stop dreaming and being yourselves; never forget where you come from. There are many ways to serve your country; we chose music," he added.

The LP includes tracks like the namesake "DtMF," a deeply nostalgic viral hit that resonated not only among Puerto Ricans but also throughout Latin America. The song also received the Latin GRAMMY for Best Urban/Urban Fusion Performance and Best Urban Song. 

Bad Bunny arrived at the 2025 Latin GRAMMYS as the artist with the most nominations of the night, with 12 categories. He also took home the award for Best Reggaeton Performance for "Voy a Llevarte Pa' PR." In between his wins, Benito performed "WELTiTA" with Chuwi — another song from DeBÍ TiRAR.

Other nominees included Rauw Alejandro (Cosa Nuestra), CA7RIEL & Paco Amoroso (PAPOTA), Gloria Estefan (Raíces), Vicente García (Puñito De Yocahú), Joaquina (al romper la burbuja), Natalia Lafourcade (Cancionera), Carín León (Palabra de To's – Seca), Liniker (CAJU), Elena Rose (En las Nubes – Con Mis Panas) and Alejandro Sanz (¿Y Ahora Qué?).

Alejandro Sanz accepts the Latin GRAMMY Award for Record Of The Year for "Palmeras En El Jardín" onstage at the 2025 Latin GRAMMYS on Thursday, Nov. 13, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Alejandro Sanz accepts the Latin GRAMMY Award for Record Of The Year for "Palmeras En El Jardín" onstage at the 2025 Latin GRAMMYS on Thursday, Nov. 13, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Photo: John Parra/Getty Images for The Latin Recording Academy

Acceptance Speech

2025 Latin GRAMMYS: Alejandro Sanz Wins Record Of The Year For "Palmeras En El Jardín"

The Latin GRAMMYS veteran took home another golden gramophone for "Palmeras en el Jardin," a lovelorn ballad from his 2025 EP '¿Y Ahora Qué?'

GRAMMYs/Nov 14, 2025 - 03:52 am

Alejandro Sanz didn't just add to his Latin GRAMMY count at the 2025 Latin GRAMMYS — he extended his reign of a major category.

The legendary Spanish singer/songwriter took home his eighth Record Of The Year trophy, for "Palmeras en el jardín." He leads the category with the most career wins, also claiming the honor in 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2019, and 2020.

During this year's Record Of The Year acceptance speech, the Spanish singer celebrated the power of music, while also addressing the elephant in the room with a smile: "Music gives us life. Thank you so much to everyone… Benito, I robbed you, I'm so sorry. Karol, I'm sorry."

Of course, he was referring to his fellow Record Of The Year nominees Bad Bunny and Karol G; the former had two songs in the category, "BAILE INoLVIDABLE" and "DtMF," while Karol G's Song Of The Year-winning "Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido" was also nominated. (The other nominees were Ca7riel & Paco Amoroso's "EL DÍA DEL AMIGO" and "#TETAS"; Jorge Drexler and Conociendo Rusia's "Desastres Fabulosos"; Natalia Lafourcade's "Cancionera"; Liniker, Amaro Freitas and AnaVitória's "Ao Teu Lado"; and Zoe Gotusso's "Lara.")

"Palmeras en el jardín" is classic Sanz — a heartfelt, dramatic power ballad. It's about wanting to do everything you can to try to make your love happy, even if that means planting palm trees in the garden, as the title implies, to remind them of their home. The track is a nod to his ex-partner, Cuban multimedia artist Rachel Valdés.

"When I made it, I hesitated about whether to release it … but then I said, this is who I am," Sanz said of the song at Billboard Latin Music Week in October. "In the last year, I've learned not to be afraid of that. To say, well, there are much worse things in life than showing that you have a heart."

"Palmeras en el jardín" is the opening track to Sanz's 2025 EP, ¿Y ahora qué?, which also earned the crooner a Latin GRAMMY for Best Contemporary Pop Album. The now 24-time Latin GRAMMY winner brought another tender ¿Y ahora qué? track, "El vino de tu boca," to life with a dynamic performance, during which he debuted an upbeat new flamenco-guitar-infused song, "Las Guapas," from his upcoming album.