T o tell the truth, Andry Kiddos can’t remember exactly when he started producing music. He must have been around 13 or 14, just tinkering around on a couple of programs he downloaded from the internet, but before he knew it, he was making full-blown songs. “It was just about that innocence you have when you’re a kid,” he says. “You’re trying something new and you have that desire to learn and connect with something that feels bigger than you.”

His first beat ended being an up-tempo merengue, a sound that used to reverberate throughout Venezuela , where he grew up. “It used to play so much in my hometown, and since I was making a lot of things that reflected what I was hearing in Venezuela and what was around me, it made sense that it was one of the first sounds.” He played with r

See Full Page