Hailing
from Venezuela, Papayo was professional by age 14, lying about his age to join
one of Miami’s most popular bands. He’s studied music theory, composition
and production and since his early days, hasn’t stopped. A a leader,
Papayo has two solo releases but more recently, has been busy touring with mega
Rap super-star, Pitbull. In collaboration with “Pit”, Papayo earned his
1st Grammy for his participation in “Echa paella Manos Pa’rriba”, earning Best
Urgan Performance at the 14th Annual Latin Grammys.
Manuel “Papayo” Corao maps where he’s been and where he’s going next with On the Road, the Venezuelan-born singer-songwriter’s second independent release. The Miami-based artist wrote the album over four years, recording its 11 songs during rare breaks from his high-profile gig playing percussion with Pitbull on the international superstar’s never-ending world tour. “I recorded whenever and wherever I could,” he explains. “When I had the time, I made it count.”?The track listing reads like an atlas, pairing the song title with city where it was written. “The best part of traveling around the world is that I get to hear so many different kinds of music,” Papayo says. “I soak up as much as I can.”?Written on the move, the album reflects that kinetic energy by covering a lot of ground musically. For this record, I explored a lot of the music I love,” Papayo explains. On the Road touches on: pop (“Solo Importas Tu”), reggae (“Beautiful Day”), salsa (“Para Ti”), R&B (“Sigo Aqui”), as well as merengue on the singles “Me Faltas Tu” and “Eres Tu.”
Unlike the album’s eclectic mix of rhythms, the songs are united by themes of love. “I’m a romantic who loves to write about love,” Papayo says. “Most of the songs are from personal experience. But even the lyrics that are not true speak the truth.”
Without a doubt, the most personal song on the album is “Madre.” Papayo wrote the song to his mother, who has always encouraged his musical curiosity. It opens with a gorgeous piano melody played by Jorge Gómez, Pitbull’s keyboardist. “The entire band contributed,” Papayo says, “especially our bass player Leo Brooks, who co-produced a lot of the album and wrote some of the songs with me.” Other guest artists on the album include Motiff, The Agents, Jesse Michael and Cepls.
For Papayo, the album represents an important landmark on a journey that began when he started writing songs as a teenager. After moving from Caracas, Venezuela to Miami when he was 12, Papayo studied music theory, composition and production before becoming a professional musician at the age of 14, lying about his age so he could join the popular Miami-based band Don Pepe. “I told them I was 17,” he says laughing. “Two years later they found out my real age, but it was too late.”
After touring the U.S. with the group for four years, he left to join Seunalo and later Elastic Bond. Each experience helped him grow as an artist, Papayo says, but none gave him the opportunity to fully express his lifelong passion for singing and songwriting.
That changed in 2007 when he started Concrete Rebels and recorded the band’s self-titled debut. “It was the album I’d always wanted to make,” Papayo says. As fate would have it, the group was put on hold when he was asked to join Pitbull’s band just weeks after the album was finished. “I did what I set out to do, so I have no regrets,” he says.
Papayo returns to that crossroads in 2012, ready to blaze a new trail with On the Road.