Punchlines y Perreo with Feid
Born in Medellin, Feid shaped the FERXXO sound with warm, airy vocals over sleek dembow and glassy synths.
Medellin roots, Miami jokes
For this festival pairing, Marcello-Hernandez opens with quick-hit stand-up before Feid runs a compact, dance-forward set.What might get played
Expect anchors like Classy 101, Feliz Cumpleanos Ferxxo, and a lift on Yandel 150, with a late tag of Bubalu. You will see a bilingual mix of reggaeton die-hards and comedy fans, from college crews to thirty-somethings, many in green caps or soccer jerseys. Early on, Feid penned hooks for others, including co-writing Ginza for J-Balvin and cutting guide vocals in Medellin studios. His shows often lean into a signature green palette, and he likes snapping songs into quick medleys to keep the floor moving. Heads-up: these setlist picks and production notes are inferred from recent outings and may change show to show.The Feid and Marcello Scene, Up Close
This crowd leans expressive but relaxed, with lots of green trucker hats, sporty jerseys, cargos, and bright sneakers.
Green everywhere
Fans trade Spanglish one-liners from Marcello-Hernandez in the lobby, then flood back for Ferxxo chants when the DJ drops the tag. During hooky moments, the room sings Feliz Cumpleanos Ferxxo like a choir while phones pop up for a few seconds, then go away.Callbacks and choruses
Couples dance in place during dembow loops and switch to shoulder sways during softer bridges. Merch trends skew to blocky FERXXO fonts, neon-green caps, and show dates printed in a techy typeface. After the last beat lands, people compare punchlines and rank which groove hit hardest, more like a mixtape debrief than a victory lap.How Feid Finds the Pocket Live
On stage, Feid sings in a relaxed, breathy tone that sits just behind the beat, making the groove feel easy and unforced.
Groove first, lights second
The band or DJ keeps a tight dembow skeleton, with live percussion adding click and clap while keys paint neon chords around the vocal. He often trims intros and lets the crowd take the first chorus before the drums hit, then flips a verse into half-time for contrast.Small tweaks, big feel
A not-so-obvious move is pitching a few tracks down a notch live, which deepens the color of his voice without losing bounce. You might hear medleys that stitch hooks from two songs, with the MD cueing quick drops so the bass returns right on a chant. Lighting leans green with clean strobes on downbeats, but the music stays in front of the visuals.If You Like Feid, You Might Roll With
Fans of Bad-Bunny will click with the laid-back, swaggering groove and the switch-ups between trap and reggaeton pulses. Karol-G followers overlap through glossy hooks and a pop-forward chorus style that still moves the floor. If you ride with J-Balvin, the color-coded world-building and sleek synth textures feel familiar, plus both acts value melody over brute volume. Young-Miko brings a fresh, minimal bounce and sharp wordplay that matches the breezy side of Feid's catalog. Fans of Yandel share a love for smooth baritone hooks and polished live backing tracks that snap right into a dembow pocket. All of these artists draw bilingual crowds who prefer melody-first writing and clean, danceable drums over maximal noise.