There’s a shift happening in the music industry. Artists who succeed globally are not trying to sound global at all. Instead, they are leaning into local culture, identity, and community, and letting that authenticity drive momentum outward. 🌍 🎶
Drawing from real-world artist examples, platform data, and recent global trends, Gui Morais, Symphonic’s A&R & Client Development Manager for Europe, explains why building locally has become the strongest path to international success.
Gui plays a key role in supporting independent artists and labels as they scale across global markets. With extensive experience across Europe, Latin America, and the wider international music ecosystem, Gui brings a deeply informed perspective on how culturally-rooted movements grow from local scenes into worldwide success. Below, he shares how this shift is playing out in real time and what it means for artists navigating today’s global music landscape…
Building Bridges: Why Local Culture Is the Key to Global Music Success
By Gui Morais, A&R & Client Development Manager, Europe, Symphonic

A fantastic mentor once told me, “Global success doesn’t start with a strategy. It starts with identity.”
I’ve seen that proven true countless times. From baile funk in Rio to drill in London, one thing has become clear: local culture isn’t a barrier to global reach, it’s the foundation of it.
From Local Success to Global Impact
For decades, breaking into the U.S. or U.K. was seen as the definition of success. Not anymore. The model has flipped.
Artists break locally, and then the world follows. We just saw that in real time this month when Bololo Records reached #13 on Spotify’s Global Top 50 with a baile funk track. It first topped the charts in Brazil, then climbed internationally within days, fueled by social media, diaspora communities, and organic discovery. There was no global campaign, just authenticity, momentum, and a home base that believed.
That’s the new playbook. When your home market believes in you, the world will listen. And Bololo isn’t the exception; this is happening every week with artists around the globe.
The Data Behind the Shift
The numbers back this shift.
According to the IFPI Global Music Report 2025, global recorded-music revenues grew 4.8% year-on-year to $29.6 billion, with streaming making up 69% of total revenue. The fastest-growing territories are Latin America (+22.5%), MENA (+22.8%), and Sub-Saharan Africa (+22.6%), all led by artists deeply connected to their own sounds and stories.
In Europe, research from the London School of Economics shows that local music now dominates national charts: Italy’s Top 10 rose from 30% local in 2017 to 70% in 2022, Poland’s from 10% in 2012 to 70% in 2022, and France’s Top 10 is now led by French-language rap.
The world isn’t flattening, it’s fracturing beautifully. Local stories are winning global hearts.
What Artists Can Learn From This
So what does this mean for artists, exactly? The data reinforces one truth: you need to act locally to grow globally. And when you analyze recent success stories, you start to see a pattern emerge:
- Start local. Your first market is your testing ground and your amplifier.
- Be authentic. Your story is your strategy, don’t trade it for algorithms.
- Use data wisely. Learn where your music connects and grow from there.
- Collaborate with intention. Work with artists who share your cultural language.
- Build community, not campaigns. Momentum built on trust travels further than hype.
Case Study: Finding the Right Cultural Fit
Every artist dreams of international reach, but few stop to ask where their sound truly belongs. For example, take Deekapz, an artist from Brazil, with whom I recently worked with. Their latest album blends R&B and Afrobeats, and though they aren’t from West Africa or Europe, it found natural traction in Nigeria, Ghana, and the U.K. because the sound made sense there. It wasn’t about chasing a trend; it was about connecting to an existing cultural rhythm.
That connection led to editorial support from those regions, a clear validation of where their music resonates.
Social Media and Cultural Fluency
Social media, for all its chaos, accelerates that process. When a song connects, it crosses borders in hours, not months. Look at Tezz, a 17-year-old from France, who mixes French hip-hop with U.K. drill. In six weeks, he jumped from 200,000 to 700,000 Spotify Monthly Listeners organically. His strategy was simple but smart, creating content that resonated with both French- and English-speaking audiences, while keeping his sound authentic.
That’s cultural fluency: knowing how to belong to more than one world at once. Global isn’t a location anymore, it’s a conversation.
Redefining Global at the Highest Level
Even artists at the top are reimagining this idea. Rosalía’s latest album, featuring songs in 13 different languages, reflects a new kind of global thinking, not by abandoning her roots, but by expanding how she communicates them. It’s not just about language, it’s about empathy. It’s about caring enough to connect with listeners wherever they are, without losing who you are.
The next wave of global stars isn’t coming from predictable places; it’s already rising from Medellín, Accra, Dublin, São Paulo, and Paris. The future of music isn’t about erasing borders; it’s about building bridges strong enough to carry culture across them.
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Key Takeaways
- Global success increasingly starts with strong local cultural momentum.
- Artists who build trust and identity in their home markets grow internationally faster.
- Data shows the fastest-growing music markets are driven by culturally rooted sounds.
- Authenticity and community now travel further than generalized “global” sound.