![]() ![]() However his audience interpreted it, “Gasolina” turned out to be the fuel that reggaetón, and Yankee, needed to explode. “People looked for a hidden meaning: Was I talking about alcohol, about drugs? But that track is completely literal.” He’s sitting in the library of the Palacio Provincial, a newly opened hotel in a 19th-century building in the heart of trendy Old San Juan - a 10-minute drive but a lifetime away from that old Villa Kennedy apartment. ![]() “The verse was so simple and easy to remember,” recalls Yankee today. Together with rapper and lyricist Eddie Dee, they fleshed out a track, adding the sound of gunning motors in the introduction along with Yankee’s rapid-fire verses and, atop Luny’s thumping, aggressive beat, that earworm of a refrain that sounded like a schoolyard taunt. He took the chorus and flow to his friend Luny, of production duo Lunytunes, then the leading producers on the scene.
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