Logo
search
Logo

Síguenos en Redes

TikTok Instagram Facebook YouTube
Fuerza Regida Closed Sueños 2026 With Corridos, Chaos and Manifested Glory

Fuerza Regida Closed Sueños 2026 With Corridos, Chaos and Manifested Glory

adminkush

LA KW

mayo 25, 2026 • 5 min lectura

Fuerza Regida opened its Sueños 2026 headlining set with “Marlboro Rojo,” and within seconds, the mood at Grant Park tipped from festival excitement into something sweatier, louder and a little less stable. By Sunday night (May 24), the San Bernardino group had turned the final stretch of one of the country’s biggest Latin music festivals into a full-blown corridos fever dream — the kind with girls screaming, bodies giving out near the barricade and songs hitting hard enough to feel almost physical.

That was always going to be part of the story. In a conversation with Billboard before the set, the group reflected on playing the inaugural Sueños in 2022 without top billing and coming back this year to headline — a move they said they had already “manifested.” After a run that included their groundbreaking album IIIXPANTIA (2025) and an even bigger grip on the corridos conversation, the upgrade felt earned.

JOP hit the stage in a black trench coat, beanie and sunglasses, serving regional Mexican menace with just enough rockstar vanity to send the front rows into overdrive. The screaming started instantly. So did the phones. At a certain point, the reaction around him stopped feeling like regular festival fandom and started reading more like mass devotion — primal, messy, borderline unwell. But Fuerza Regida’s pull is bigger than one frontman. As a band, they’ve figured out how to make corridos hit like adrenaline, and Sueños felt fully locked into that frequency.

The set moved with the loose, cocky energy of artists who knew they could afford to have fun. Chuyin — the masked Street Mob artist whose debut album recently landed on the Billboard charts — popped up for “Pues Ya Ni Pedo.” Chino Pacas returned to the stage for “Qué Onda.” Los Gemelos de Sinaloa and Clave Especial added to the sense that this was less a tightly controlled headline slot than a rolling onstage link-up between artists moving inside the same orbit. One of the most electric pivots came from Moises López, usually posted up with the tololoche, who assumed vocal duties for the first time live and ripped off his shirt mid-hype like the assignment was to keep pushing the temperature higher.

And then there were the pauses. More than once, the set had to stop while distressed fans fainted were attended to and pulled out, carts repeatedly cutting through the crowd. Call it the Michael Jackson effect, call it overstimulation, call it what happens when a band gets big enough to short-circuit the people trying to see it up close. Whatever the label, the point landed.

Sueños ended on Fuerza Regida’s terms: corridos at full volume, guests in rotation, fans hanging on by a thread. Next up, the group takes that same energy on the road with Esto No Es Un Tour, which kicks off its U.S. stadium run on June 18 at Petco Park in San Diego.

forum Comentarios (0)

No hay comentarios aún. ¡Sé el primero!

También te puede interesar

Mexico

Yung Miami Jokes About Getting Left on Read by Drake: ‘Like, Come On Now!’

Culture

The Beach Boys’ Official Online Store Drops ‘Pet Sounds’ 60th-Anniversary Merch & Apparel: Shop Now

Business

Clive Davis Hospitalized in New York After Respiratory Issue — UPDATE

Business

NIVA ’26 Conference to Focus on Live Music in a ‘Post Monopoly World’

Mexico

New York Knicks Star Jalen Brunson Says He’d Pay $7,500 to See This Music Legend Perform Live

Mexico

Why Eric André Made A (Surprisingly Good) Classical Music Album

Latin

Becky G Suggests a Taco Spin-Off & Says ‘You Can’t Even Enjoy That’ While Eating Spiciest Wing on ‘Hot Ones’

Mexico

Jim Jones Thinks Jay-Z ‘Spared’ the People He Dissed at Roots Picnic: ‘I Wanna See the Yankee Stadium Freestyle’

Mexico

Here’s How Olivia Rodrigo Feels About Possibly Collaborating With Sabrina Carpenter Someday

Historias

5 músicos que predijeron su muerte