quevedo bad bunny madrid concert surprise

Quevedo joins Bad Bunny on stage in Madrid: a historic night

A night of rumours and a Canarian surprise

There were a thousand rumours swirling around Bad Bunny’s last concert in Madrid. Would Rosalía appear? Would C. Tangana be the great guest of the night? In the end, the closing night of the Puerto Rican’s residency at the Metropolitano stadium had a Canarian accent. Quevedo was the surprise artist, and his appearance sparked pandemonium among the more than 60,000 people who packed the venue.

An unexpected collaboration on stage

The singer from Gran Canaria burst onto the scene during one of the most anticipated moments of the show. At every Bad Bunny concert, there is a special song that is not repeated on the other dates – a formula the artist has used to keep fans on the edge of their seats throughout his entire tour of Spain. On this occasion, as the countdown began, the opening chords of Columbia rang out and Quevedo appeared on the roof of La Casita, one of the most recognisable elements of the Puerto Rican’s stage set-up. The crowd reacted instantly.

Quevedo performed one of his best-known hits while the Metropolitano sang along in unison. Meanwhile, Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio – Bad Bunny’s real name – remained on the roof of La Casita before embracing the Canarian singer. The two sang Columbia together and mixed it with Moscow Mule, the opening track from Un verano sin ti, one of the Puerto Rican artist’s most popular albums. The scene left a powerful image: the Canary Islands and Puerto Rico united through music on one of Spain’s biggest stages.

Fans and flags: a historic moment for Canarian music

Among the audience, there were dozens of flags from the Islands, visible throughout a night that is now etched in the recent history of Canarian music. Quevedo, the most-streamed artist in the archipelago, shared the stage with one of the biggest Spanish-language artists in the world. The surprise was even greater because, during the performance of Velda – a song included on Bad Bunny’s latest album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos – the Puerto Rican had been joined by Dei V. However, the great guest of the night was someone else. The real star appearance came later, with Quevedo’s entrance and the stadium exploding.

Quevedo’s solo moment and an emotional finale

The Canarian artist stayed on La Casita alone to sing Wanda and Scandic, thanking the Madrid audience for their support. The most emotional moment came at the end of his set, when he closed the performance with Quédate, the track that catapulted him to international fame alongside Bizarrap. The entire Metropolitano joined the Gran Canaria singer and sang along powerfully to a song that is now part of the musical memory of a whole generation.

What’s next for Bad Bunny and Quevedo?

Bad Bunny thus brings to a close ten nights in Madrid, plus two concerts in Barcelona, as part of a tour that has confirmed his enormous appeal in Spain. He will now continue his European tour with Debí Tirar Más Fotos, although the artist himself has already hinted at the possibility of adding more dates in Spain. The big question is whether the Canary Islands will finally be one of the chosen stops. Another question that his fans have been asking for some time also remains unanswered: will the long-awaited collaboration between Quevedo and Bad Bunny finally happen? For now, El Baifo has already sung with many of the biggest names on the current Puerto Rican scene. El Conejo Malo, however, remains the great collaboration that has so far eluded him.

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