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The Argentine singer returns to her origins in reggaeton after a personal process that led her to rediscover her artistic essence
The artist is in Puerto Rico to participate in the 2026 Tu Música Urbano Mix Awards, where she received several nominations, including Female Artist of the Year, and will present her most recent single, “Qué Ganas de Comerte,” a collaboration with Chilean artists Jere Klein and Lucky Brown.
“I am in a very mature artistic stage and very calm too, very sure of myself. I put a lot of work into what I am doing, with a lot of responsibility, I take the time I have to take. I am very calm analyzing things and giving cool things to people,” she expressed during an interview with EL VOCERO.
This state of tranquility comes after a complex stage that gave rise to Quimera, a project that marked a before and after in his personal and professional life.
“It was a very heavy situation that I had to go through on a personal level, on a health level. So it was like a rebirth for me. Everything I was able to tell and express in that album managed to get me back on my axis, a little to the usual Maria,” she explained.
It was precisely this process that ended up prompting her to rediscover reggaeton, the genre with which she began her career.
“That’s why doing reggaeton came back to me. It’s basically what I started doing,” he said.
The performer of hits like “Automático”, “Corazónvacco” and “ojala” also spoke about the importance that Puerto Rico has within her artistic career and within the urban movement in general.
“I am very aware that Puerto Rico is a mecca of the genre and the urban movement. At one point it is a validation, the truth is, because it is where this genre and this movement was born, that they shake your hand and welcome you, or that artists from this country want to make music, it is obviously a validation and respect,” he stated.
Becerra has previously collaborated with Puerto Rican figures such as Ivy Queen, Farruko, De La Ghetto and Chencho Corleone, among other exponents of the genre.
During this visit, in addition to her professional commitments, the artist will take the opportunity to get closer to Puerto Rican culture. According to what he said, he decided to stay several additional days on the Island to visit some of its most emblematic spaces.
“It is a country very rich in culture in every sense. We want to tour Old San Juan, take a tour of La Perla and really learn. Beyond going because it is a well-known neighborhood and taking a photo, we want to know its history,” he commented.