Weed And Slum Culture Take Over The Mainstream: The Curious Case Of A Viral Musical Phenomenon, Cumbia 420

L-Gante and his ultra-viral crew are to today’s popular music in Latin America what N.W.A. was to North American music in the late 80s and early 90s.

By Hernán Panessi and Javier Hasse.

"Nowhere else have I heard a rhythm like this, a sound like this,” declares the mega-viral Argentine artist L-Gante, poster child for the new, cannabis-infused musical style born in the favelas that’s jolting Latin America and the Spanish-speaking world: Cumbia 420.

L-Gante has been dominating the leaderboard for over a year now, sometimes boasting as many as ten of his songs on Billboard charts at the same time. What’s more, his videos have accumulated more than a billion views on YouTube over the last twelve months.

Authors’ note: remember to skip the ads to see the actual music videos.

What’s Cumbia 420?

Formally, Cumbia 420 is cumbia, reggaeton and marijuana. In other words, Latin rhythms and good old weed. And its rise to virality reminisces of the ascent of gangsta rap into the mainstream. L-Gante and his crew are to today’s popular music in Latin America what N.W.A. was to American music in the late 80s and early 90s.

"It's reggaeton with the cadence of cumbia in its rhythmic structure,” explains DT.Bilardo, L-Gante’s producer and a guru of Latin American fusions who, by dint of his hits, laid the foundations for the musical phenomenon of the moment.

Cumbia 420 is “a brand, rather than a style,” he adds.

Unlike L-Gante, who has more than 4 million followers on Instagram, DT.Bilardo, who pulls the strings from backstage, has only 100K. And he likes it that way.

The Cumbia 420 Assembly Line

With an approach to production that reminds of Taylorism – in their serial line of assembly every station is labeled “work,” DT.Bilardo and the crew of the Kriterio Music label (which includes professionals in design, audiovisual art and sound production), publish practically one track per week.

Again: That’s one track per week.

And the path is almost always the same: a song comes out accompanied by a video clip, the view count starts to surge quickly, and, within a few hours, it becomes a hit.

That’s one hit per week!

"Cumbia 420 connects in a very personal way with the audience that it seeks to represent. It's a product that’s 100% designed for people who smoke, for people from the hood, the ghetto. It’s for humble people who are immersed in an adverse situation but want to get out and want to progress,” details DT.Bilardo, talking about the close connection that Cumbia 420 has with its followers.

But Cumbia 420 is not just about the South American superstar L-Gante and his producer DT.Bilardo. Others, such as Perro Primo, are also helping push the movement forward.