Jay Wheeler has officially released La Voz Favorita, a 24-track project that arrives as one of the most important albums of his career. Released via Dynamic Records and distributed by EMPIRE, the album builds on the momentum of “De Lejitos,” a single that helped launch this new era with major digital traction and strong fan reaction.
For Wheeler, the title carries more weight than branding. La Voz Favorita takes a name long associated with his fanbase and turns it into a full artistic statement. The album opens with gratitude toward his wife, family, team, producers, and managers, framing the project as both a personal reflection and a career reset.
The move arrives at a moment when Jay Wheeler is no longer just operating as one of Latin music’s most recognizable romantic voices. He is expanding the idea of what a modern urbano artist can be: singer, songwriter, streamer, podcast host, and real-time digital personality. That evolution gives La Voz Favorita a different kind of weight. It is not only an album about love, heartbreak, and vulnerability; it is also a project about control, identity, and the direct relationship Wheeler has built with his audience.
Across the album, Wheeler moves between trap, R&B, reggaetón, and the emotional Latin pop sound that first connected him with fans. The first three tracks are intentionally connected, setting up the project’s emotional arc before expanding into collaborations with Mora, Luar La L, Marcelo Rubio, Deimi, Kennyy, Abraham Mateo, Luister La Voz, Torrres, and Remers.
That range matters. Wheeler’s previous phases often leaned heavily into his strength as a romantic interpreter, but La Voz Favorita feels designed to widen the frame. Songs like “Tiffany” with Mora bring back the chemistry and risk-taking fans expect from their collaborations, while records such as “No Es Sano,” “Castillo,” and “Corazón De Lego” keep the emotional storytelling at the center. “Rubio,” one of the album’s most personal moments, pays tribute to Wheeler’s grandfather, who introduced him to salsa and helped shape his musical identity.
See the “La Voz Favorita” Tracklist Below:
- Grax
- La Voz Favorita
- Por Tu Culpa 2.0
- She Like 2 F*** feat. Luar a L, Torrres & Remers
- Blicky
- De Lejitos
- Fomo
- Castillo feat. Deimi
- Tu Peor Opción
- Refe 1
- Refe 2
- Parte D
- No Es Sano feat. Marcelo Rubio
- Adiós
- Ma
- Modelito feat. Luister La Voz
- Bby Contesta
- Pa La City
- Todo Mal feat. Abraham Mateo
- Tiffany feat. Mora
- Fuga
- Corazón De Lego feat. Kennyy
- Rubio
- Track Loading…
The album’s competitive positioning is clear: Wheeler is not abandoning the romantic lane that made him powerful, but he is refusing to be limited by it. In a Latin music landscape where artists are increasingly expected to be multi-format creators, La Voz Favorita places him in a more flexible category. He can still deliver ballads and heartbreak anthems, but he is also engaging with trap, livestream culture, and collaborative urbano energy in a way that reflects where the genre is heading.
That digital strategy is central to this rollout. Wheeler has become one of the Latin artists most visibly embracing livestream platforms, especially Kick, while also extending his universe through RandomChat and fan-centered content. His upcoming RandomChat LIVE event at Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot on Friday, May 29, will combine live performances from the album, comedy, a live podcast edition, and a Cooking with Wheelers segment with his wife, Zhamira Zambrano.
The timing is notable because Latin music’s biggest artists are no longer relying only on traditional album rollouts. They are building ecosystems. Wheeler’s strength is that his ecosystem feels personal rather than manufactured. His streams, podcast moments, family-centered clips, and fan interactions have become part of the music’s emotional context, giving listeners more than a tracklist to follow.
With La Voz Favorita, Jay Wheeler is not simply releasing another album. He is consolidating the identity that fans gave him and turning it into a full-scale artistic chapter. The project reinforces his place as one of Puerto Rico’s defining voices while showing that his next phase may be shaped just as much by digital intimacy as by radio hits and streaming numbers.
As the album continues its rollout, the focus now shifts to how these songs live beyond release week: onstage, across fan communities, through livestreams, and inside the broader conversation around urbano’s emotional future.
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