Some artists chase a sound. Mogul grew up inside one. Raised in Medellín, Colombia, in a family where music wasn’t a hobby but a household fixture, he came up surrounded by instruments and the people who played them. One uncle on drums, another on guitar, and Mogul himself singing from the time he was a kid. That early immersion shaped everything that came after, and now, based in Dubai, he’s turning those roots into something he calls global commercial reggaeton.
His music sits firmly in Latin reggaeton, but Mogul doesn’t treat the genre as a fixed box. He pulls from house, bachata, hip-hop and R&B, letting those influences color a style that stays anchored in reggaeton while picking up texture from everything else he loves. The result is music built for movement and repetition, the kind of track you put on in the car or the gym and find yourself singing along to before the second chorus.
That instinct to make people feel good is the whole point for him. He talks about wanting listeners to catch that specific feeling great music gives you, the one that makes you hit replay without thinking about it. It’s a simple goal, but a hard one to pull off, and his early output suggests he understands what it takes.
His influences read like a roadmap of reggaeton’s biggest names. Daddy Yankee, Nicky Jam and J Balvin soundtracked his youth, and their fingerprints are easy to hear in how he approaches melody and rhythm. For a kid from Medellín, those artists were the inspiration that shaped his early years, and that lineage still runs through what he makes today.

Right now, Mogul has two songs out, and both land harder than you’d expect from someone relatively new on the scene. “Bate La Chapa” dropped on June 3rd and runs a generous 4:16, while “Zas” followed on June 13th with a tighter 3:11. The songwriting is sharp, the production is clean, and the whole thing carries a radio-ready polish that’s tough to fake. For an artist still building his catalog, the quality bar is already high.
He’s not slowing down, either. Mogul has several songs in progress and is aiming to finish his debut album soon. There aren’t any shows on the calendar at the moment. As he puts it, right now it’s all about making music and enjoying life, and he sounds like someone in no rush to force the next move before it’s ready.
That last part matters more than it might sound. Mogul came up low to middle class, making money in business, with Dubai always sitting in the back of his mind as the dream. Now he’s living there, doing what he loves, and the gratitude in how he talks about it is hard to miss. The move from Medellín to the UAE isn’t just a change of address, it’s the payoff for years of work.
You can follow Mogul on Instagram and stream his music on Spotify.





























