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Prince Royce in Orlando

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Prince Royce
Kia Center — Orlando, FL

Prince Royce basically invented the modern bachata crossover. The guy came out of New York in the late 90s as a teenager and somehow made a centuries-old Dominican rhythm sound like something every pop radio station needed to play. 'Stand By Me' did the heavy lifting—became this gateway drug for people who'd never heard bachata before. He kept that going through the 2000s with stuff like 'Kiss Me' that felt like the perfect middle ground between Latin and mainstream pop. What's always been true about Prince Royce is that he doesn't overthink it. He's not trying to reinvent bachata or prove anything. He just sings these straightforward love songs and somehow they stick. He's sold millions of records globally, done the Latin Grammy thing, collaborated with everyone from Pitbull to Arturo Sandoval. The guy's been consistent in the way that actually matters—he showed up, delivered what he promised, and never treated his audience like they were something to outgrow.

Shows are packed with people who know every word. Couples slow dance through the whole thing. Prince Royce works the crowd with genuine ease, no pretense. You get the sense he's played these songs a thousand times and means every note. The energy is romantic rather than frenzied.

Known for Stand By Me, Guilty, Kiss Me, Obsesión, Back It Up

Prince Royce has a solid track record in Orlando. He last brought his blend of reggaeton and ballads to Amway Center back in October 2021, playing to a crowd that clearly still appreciates his '90s crossover hits alongside newer material. The city's Latin music audience knows him well.

Orlando's Latin music scene runs deep, from reggaeton to salsa to trap latino, but there's always room for bachata's slower burn. Prince Royce essentially helped modernize the genre in the early 2000s, stripping away some of the traditionalism while keeping the romance intact. That crossover appeal—accessible to both dedicated Latin music fans and mainstream listeners—is exactly what Orlando crowds tend to appreciate.

Stay in downtown Orlando's Church Street district or head to Winter Park, where brick-lined avenues and oak trees give the area actual character. Eat at The Courtesy, which does elevated Southern cooking without the pretense. Spend an afternoon at the Mennello Museum of American Art—small, genuinely interesting, and nothing like the theme-park scene. Take a drive through the Rollins College campus in Winter Park if you want to remember Florida had a slower side. Come back downtown for music, grab a drink at a proper bar instead of a nightclub, and let the evening unfold naturally.

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