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Ryan Castro: Medallo Roots, Big-Room Moves

Ryan Castro comes out of Medellin's Castilla, fusing streetwise reggaeton with sweet sing-rap hooks.

From buses to big rooms

His rise from neighborhood buses to global stages shapes a sound that stays gritty while chasing bright melodies.

What the night might sound like

Expect a dance-heavy set anchored by Mujeriego, Jordan, and Monastery, with a slow-burn pocket mid-show for Wasa Wasa. The crowd skews mixed-age and bilingual, with Colombia flags, tight friend crews, and couples trading space for small dance circles instead of pits. Energy builds in waves, and you can hear pockets chant Medallo on the drops while phones stay mostly down for the perreo stretches. Before the breakthrough, he sang on city buses and at intersections to save for studio time, a grind that feeds his 'El Cantante del Ghetto' call tag on tracks. He often teases hooks a cappella first, a habit traced to early sets where weak PAs forced the melody to carry on its own. Heads up: the set and production notes here are inferred from recent runs and could shift by city.

Ryan Castro: Where Medallo Meets The Floor

Flags, kits, and dance circles

You will see green-and-white kits, streetwear with clean sneakers, and club-ready fits, but the mood stays friendly and dance-focused. Groups trade spots so friends can film a hook, then put phones away when the dembow deepens and hips take over. Chants pop up on intros, from 'Me-da-llo' to the simple 'Ryan, Ryan,' with quick echo replies from the back corners.

Neighborhood pride, global room

Merch leans toward block-letter tour tees, hometown graphics, and caps that nod to Castilla without flashy foil. Fans swap favorite features at the bar, comparing collab verses and arguing which version of Monastery hits harder live. Older reggaeton heads clock the nods to 2000s cuts in the DJ interludes, while newer fans stick to the chorus lines and let the drums do the rest. The scene feels like a neighborhood party scaled up, with respect for space and a shared goal to keep the groove moving all night.

Ryan Castro: Groove Over Gimmicks

Hooks first, rhythm close behind

Live, Ryan Castro rides a light rasp that sits on top of the beat, switching from talky verses to tuned, sticky choruses. The band and DJ keep the dembow tight, often muting keys and guitars so percussion and sub-bass frame the voice. Arrangements favor two-verse structures with a short vamp so he can extend the hook if the room sings it back.

Small switches, big payoffs

He and the MD like a quick drop-out before the refrain, letting the crowd carry a bar or two before the beat slams in again. A subtle trick you may notice is a half-time bridge in one or two songs that flips back to full speed for the final chorus, which makes the last hit feel bigger. LED blocks and saturated greens nod to Medallo, but the visuals usually stay in service of tempo and accents rather than spectacle for its own sake. On some nights the DJ pitches certain intros down a notch so his entrance sits warmer, then raises it to record key once the groove locks.

Ryan Castro: If You Like, Try These

Same wave, different shades

Fans of Feid will recognize the smooth Medallo glide and mid-tempo bounce, plus the way synth lines leave space for voice-led hooks. Blessd shares the same city roots and street-to-stage story, and his shows lean on similar sing-rap cadences built for dancing. If you like color-forward pop reggaeton that still hits hard, J-Balvin lands near this lane even when the grooves get glossy.

Where the overlap lives

For fans who want more bars between the choruses, Myke-Towers blends trap textures with dembow pockets in a way this crowd tends to enjoy. Those four acts also favor clean, chantable hooks and crowd call-outs, which mirror how Ryan Castro runs his stage pacing. If those names sit in your playlists, this show will likely feel familiar while staying firmly tied to Medellin's current wave.

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