"Mas Flow: Los Benjamins" is credited with bridging the gap between
reggaeton from the streets and traditional mainstream
latin pop through Luny Tunes' collaboration with pop-rock group
RBD and the success of "
Noche de Entierro (Nuestro Amor)" especially in
Latin America. Thanks to the efforts of commercializing the rugged street sounds of the authentic reggaeton and fusing it with more pop elements, "Los Benjamins" opened the doors for future acts such as
J Balvin and
CNCO renowned for their pop reggaeton fusions. "
Noche de Entierro (Nuestro Amor)" went on to become one of the most successful singles of the year and is one of the most recognized reggaeton songs of all-time. Despite low sales, thanks to massive bootlegging, "Mas Flow: Los Benjamins" became renowned throughout Latin America to the point it is now hailed as one of the classic reggaeton albums of all-time. Many songs from the album such as "Mi Fanática" by
Arcángel & De la Ghetto, "Esta Noche" by
Tito El Bambino, "Welcome To My Crib" by
Randy and "Hello" by Zion became club hits in Latin America and are amongst the most famous songs in each of the artists' catalog. Commercially, during its initial release, the album was considered a disaster due to low sales but over the course of time thanks to the lead single's fame and Luny Tunes' continued success, the product is now considered an important piece in the history of reggaeton music. Sadly, the downfall of the reggaeton genre during this period is largely attributed to "Mas Flow: Los Benjamins" for not living up to expectations in its initial release and major latin labels soon started to focus on other less expensive musical genres such as
Mexican Regional and
Latin Pop due to
reggaeton's success leading to increased
budgets and expenditures. Luny Tunes then signed with Fuego Music Entertainment around this time. Albums such as "Millenium" and
Baby Ranks'
Mi Flow: This Is It eventually saw releases outside of the
"Mas Flow" banner. "Millenium" was released in 2007 by the companies Gravity Blu and All Star Records reworking the album and having it distributed by
Machete Music/
Universal Latino. The album did not have any success as the final product excluded many of the leaked songs by artists' such as
Nicky Jam,
Don Omar and
Zion that fans were expecting and "Millenium" also received no promotion with no lead single except "El Pantalon" by Don Omar which was also included in "King of Kings Live" and was a radio single with no mention of "Millenium". The original singles "El Señor De La Noche" by
Don Omar and "Alocate" by Zion eventually received official releases both being reworked by Luny Tunes' production team for the albums "
Los Bandoleros Reloaded" and "Los Benjamins". A leaked song by Nicky Jam feat. Carlitos Way "Tu y Yo" never received an official release outside of bootlegs in the underground reggaeton scene. All original versions have been recently released for free download and can now be found on
YouTube including "El Señor De La Noche"'s original intended (unreleased) version with Violin work from
Miri Ben-Ari produced by
Luny Tunes.
Baby Ranks would release his much anticipated "
Mi Flow: This Is It" in 2008 distributed by Stardome Entertainment (a record label based in Israel) with the lead single "El Amor Se Fue" feat Angel Lopez (of
Son By Four) peaking at #14 on the billboard tropical charts. "Loyalty Records: About Time" remains unfinished due to budget issues and rejection from
Universal Latino executives at the time. The album includes many incomplete and unreleased songs from the likes of "
Daddy Yankee",
"Wisin y Yandel", "
Tito El Bambino", "
Eddie Dee", "Mr Phillip", "Yo-Seph The One", and "Luigi 21 Plus" among others with the original production from
Nely,
Tainy, Bones, Nan2 and others. The last time the album was announced to be released to the reggaeton community was in 2008, since then nothing else has been mentioned. == Track listing ==