Atrapado en un Sueño (Deluxe)

Atrapado en un Sueño (Deluxe)

Following the success of his 2019 debut, Mi Vida En un Cigarro, Junior H gained a massive international following. Chief among his new fans was record executive Jimmy Humilde of L.A. label Rancho Humilde, who quickly signed the meteoric lo-fi corridos star and introduced him to the imprint's other blockbuster discovery, Natanael Cano. Later that year, Humilde formally inaugurated the era of corridos tumbados with a stacked compilation of the same name, showcasing the label's growing roster, which also included Dan Sanchez and Nueva Era. Throughout the album's 21-track run, each artist showcased their fresh take on corridos and their hallowed Mexican storytelling traditions; pairing up intermittently and running the gamut of gangster boisterousness and sadboi introspection. This album helped consolidate Junior H as a genre standard bearer, both on the back of his buzzy, malevolent collaboration with Natanael Cano on “Disfruto Lo Malo” and the romantic longing of his standalone smash “Ella.” So by the time 2020 rolled around, and with it Junior H's sophomore album Atrapado en un Sueño (Deluxe), the downcast crooner was very much living his wildest dreams. He'd been anointed the heir to Ariel Camacho's sad sierreño legacy and his songs were blasting from every other passing car. As the album's Grand Theft Auto-inspired cover suggests, Junior H and his peers had successfully led a heist on a once orthodox genre, terraforming the industry around it and tailoring their songwriting to a generation of young, online, and omnivorous fans. This upswing in Junior H's life and career is captured on “Me Siento” and “Mente Positiva,” where he muses on getting that proverbial bread and the girls on whom he plans to spend it. On the title track and “Dicen,” he examines both sides of the fame coin; at first, incredulous of the good fortune that led him to the top of the charts, and later, unpacking the envy and ire he inspired in former friends and colleagues. Junior H also pivots from the moodier tone of his debut and finds his fighting spirit on Atrapado en un Sueño (Deluxe), in no small measure fortified by his multiple collaborations with Natanael Cano. This influence is most notable on the street dealings of “Pakas en las Rakas,” while the pair teams up once again on “Si Mañana” to ponder the high mortality of artists working in an industry with deep ties to organized crime. Though odes to the 4/20 way of life abound, the album is sobering in its maturity and stellar production—consolidating Junior H as a corridos powerhouse and setting the stage for his genre-bending next chapter.

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