The lyrics to the song appear in the Just Dance logo font and are highlighted in hot pink as they are sung. There are old television lines and static overlayed on the whole background. The background resembles a retro karaoke screen. She has a glowing outline, which changes to yellow or blue and her glove is orange. She wears dark cut-out heels and gold bracelets on the left. Her pants are fuchsia with a flared leg and a thick, gold belt covering her navel. Atop, she wears a cropped, chartreuse jacket worn open with the sleeves cuffed to her elbows. She wears a simple, deep purple brassiere and a matching choker. She accessorizes with thin, deep purple, cat eye sunglasses and gold hoop earrings. She has pink, shoulder-length hair with straight, blunt bangs and flips at the end. Her outfit is based on Maria Garcia's in the music video. A video for that song just completed filming in the Dominican Republic.The dancer is a woman. 18 on the Latin Pop Digital Songs chart. Members of the Buena Vista Social Club have been the only other artists residing in Cuba under Castro to appear on the Billboard Latin charts, with Gente de Zona’s participation in “Bailando” marking a first for a contemporary Cuban resident featured on a track at the top of Hot Latin Songs. Bueno, who has lived in Miami since 2000 and travels regularly to Havana, where he is a star in his own right, is in talks with with Universal Music Latin about recording a new solo album, a follow up to his 2012 EMI release “Bueno.”Ī bilingual version of “Bailando,” with Iglesias singing in English and featuring Sean Paul, has been released to radio stations. The Bueno/Gente de Zona version of the song reached No. The new Iglesias video, also directed by Alejandro Perez in the Dominican Republic and featuring the Cuban artists and the flamenco dancers, has over 27 million views on Youtube. The song was revised and recorded by Iglesias with Bueno and Gente de Zona, and another hit for Iglesias was born. “Suddenly I got a call from Enrique Iglesias,” Otero recalls. The video quickly became popular on Youtube, where Iglesias saw it after a friend - not knowing it was the superstar’s song – told him it was a great video that he should watch. Director Alejandro Perez filmed a video for the song, featuring a flamenco troupe dancing in the streets of Havana. “The song exploded in Cuba,” Javier Otero, Gente de Zona’s manager told Billboard. Iglesias had not shown immediate interest in recording it after he and Bueno came up with the basics of “Bailando” during a writing session, according to Bueno. Collaborators Bueno and Gente de Zona did their own version of the song in 2013. 1 is the second recorded version of the song.