The 30 Best Spanish-Language Christian Music Albums of All Time
Christian music has a rich and vibrant history, forged over centuries and around the world. Each generation has contributed its unique voice to exalt the faith, and each musical work has inevitably been shaped by the trends of its time.
“Christian music has a unique characteristic: it’s characterized by its lyrical content, rather than a specific musical style or genre,” says Henry Alonzo, a Christian music executive and college professor, to Billboard Español. “Although Christian music has been present throughout the history of music—with classical composers such as Johann Sebastian Bach, who was a musician in Protestant churches—in the Hispanic world, Christian music began with printed hymnals, sheet music, and later with choirs organized in four-part harmonies (soprano, alto, tenor, and bass).
“However,” he continues, “it wasn’t until the 1970s that it consolidated as an industry in countries like Mexico, Guatemala, Argentina, Colombia, and Puerto Rico with the emergence of the first artists who recorded and distributed musical projects in an emerging and professional manner.”
In this list, we explore the history of contemporary Christian music in Spanish, highlighting 30 albums that — due to their originality, their influence on church culture, or their ability to give rise to new movements — have had a significant impact on the genre.
We begin with Misa Criolla by the late Argentine songwriter Ariel Ramírez, who changed the history of Catholic music in the 1960s by paving the way for worship in Spanish and using native rhythms. We continue with La Gran Tribulación by Stanislao Marino.
“We can’t jump to the Praise and Worship movement of the 80s and 90s without going through Marino’s music, which began in the 70s and shaped the generation of my uncles and grandparents,” explains Jake Calle, who worked as a Christian radio producer for more than a decade, in an interview with Billboard.
In 1990, “the renowned and celebrated performer Marcos Witt released the Project of Projects,” Alonzo comments about the album Proyecto AA. “With remarkable quality, the lyrics reflect an update within the Christian music repertoire, aligning themselves with a more contemporary language and very relevant to their time.” Witt has left an indelible mark as one of the great exponents of the genre.
At the beginning of the 21st century, artists like Funky burst onto the scene with an urban approach, breaking the dominance of Latin pop in the Spanish-language Christian music scene at the time. “[Funky] is a key figure in the history of Christian rap in Spanish. His album Funkytown brought legitimacy and professionalism to the urban Christian music genre,” Alonzo recalls. Although it faced resistance at the time, the album became a benchmark for a new generation of artists inspired by its urban approach.
In 2005, one of the most momentous albums for both Jesús Adrián Romero’s career and the Christian genre arrived with El Aire De Tu Casa. “This album took us by surprise, since it was preceded by Te Daré Lo Mejor, which was a congregational hit, and perhaps we were expecting more of the same,” Calle recalls. “But this album was like a watershed in the career of Jesús Adrián and the church. This album brought a new acoustic, inspirational, and poetic sound with which Romero conveys, like Van Gogh’s ‘The Starry Night,’ the light shining in homes and outside the church, showing a God present also in everyday life. It was common to see young people from the church begin to dress like Jesús Adrián and his musicians, wearing Converse shoes and vintage t-shirts, and at the same time, many musicians traded the high energy and jumping that were experienced inside churches for a more acoustic and reflective style, sitting on a stool.”
Although the first albums have had enough time to prove their staying power, we also highlight recent projects that, due to their impact on this generation of believers, are likely to endure. Among them are Kintsugi by the band Un Corazón, winner of the 2024 Latin Grammy for Best Christian Album, and CVRBON VRMOR by Farruko, who moved his followers and the Christian world with his conversion and sealed his commitment to God with this album, reinforcing a new wave of secular artists venturing into music with faith-based lyrics.
Alonzo singles out Los Voceros de Cristo with La Venida de Jesús (1972), from Guatemala, with trio harmonies in the style of Los Panchos; Generación de Jesús with Maranatha Vol. 1 (1973), pioneering Christian rock from Mexico; Manuel Bonilla with El Rey Ya Viene (1974), an essential voice in the Christian repertoire; Nena Leal with Tu Grandeza (1986), who brought mariachi to the music of faith; and Palabra en Acción with Glorificad a Jehová (1989), also from Guatemala, which redefined live congregational worship.
Join us on this spiritual sonic journey through 30 albums that have defined the history of Christian music in Spanish, in chronological order.
Powered by Billboard.