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Juanes in Los Angeles

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Juanes
Yaamava Resort & Casino at San Manuel — Highland, CA

Juanes is a Colombian rock musician who basically single-handedly brought Latin rock to mainstream recognition in the early 2000s. He started in the heavy metal band Ekhymosis before going solo in 1997, and by 2000 he was everywhere with 'A Dios le Pido,' a ballad that somehow became inescapable without being sappy. His commercial peak came with the reggaeton-tinged 'La Camisa Negra' and 'Me Enamora,' songs that proved you could make genuinely catchy pop-rock that wasn't trying too hard. He's won a ridiculous number of Grammys and Latin Grammys, partly because he actually plays most of his own instruments. Beyond the hits, he's known for environmental activism and using his platform to push political causes in Latin America, which sometimes overshadows the music itself but seems genuinely important to him.

Juanes plays like he's still proving something. High energy, lots of guitar work, crowd sings every word to the ballads. People come for nostalgia but get engaged by how much he clearly cares about the performance. Feels more intimate than you'd expect from someone of his stature.

Known for A Dios le Pido, Me Enamora, La Camisa Negra, Fotografía, Bonita Morena

Juanes has always held Los Angeles close. The Colombian rock icon brought his decades of hits to Hollywood Bowl in July 2025, playing a 25-song set that moved between his biggest moments and deeper cuts with equal weight. He opened with "Mala gente" and methodically worked through the catalog—"Fotografía," "La camisa negra," "A Dios le pido"—the songs that made him a crossover force beyond Latin rock. What made the night land was the willingness to stretch out. "Lo que me gusta a mí / Fuego / Luna" flowed into "Nada / Mis planes son amarte / Un día normal," medleys that let the songs breathe and reminded the room why Juanes has never felt confined by genre. He closed with "Se me olvidó otra vez," a fitting final note for an artist who's spent three decades refusing to be forgotten.

Los Angeles has always been where Latin rock goes to scale. The city's appetite for artists who blur rock and regional Mexican sounds, who sing in Spanish without apology, created space for Juanes to become massive here. Hollywood Bowl itself reflects this—a venue that treats Latin artists as headliners, not afterthoughts. LA's music infrastructure, its radio landscape, its sheer density of Spanish-language listeners and rock fans who cross those lines, made it a natural home for someone like Juanes.

Stay in Los Feliz, where you can walk tree-lined streets and catch views from Griffith Observatory. Dinner at Republique in the Arts District—refined French-inspired food in a restored factory space that feels more Paris than LA. Spend an afternoon at the Huntington Library in San Marino, a world-class art collection that justifies the drive. The city's recording studio history is everywhere; walk through Hollywood and you're literally surrounded by the spaces where hits were made. End the night at a jazz bar like The Fonda Theatre or catch live music on Sunset Boulevard.

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