The Latin Recording Academy announced its 2026 special awards recipients on Tuesday (June 30).
As part of its annual Special Awards Presentation during Latin Grammy week, Mexican-Spanish singer Alaska, Cuban-Mexican musician Francisco Céspedes, Mexican singer-songwriter Lila Downs, Brazilian artist Daniela Mercury and Dominican singer and songwriter Chichí Peralta will receive this year’s Lifetime Achievement Award. Additionally, Panamanian singer and songwriter Omar Alfanno will receive the Trustees Award. And, for the second consecutive year, the Latin Music Educator Award will be presented to an educator whose name has not yet been revealed.
“It is a great privilege to honor these living legends — an exceptional group whose influence transcends generations and genres — who continue to enrich and redefine our musical heritage,” said Manuel Abud, CEO of The Latin Recording Academy, in a press statement. “We are delighted to celebrate their extraordinary careers, along with the recipient of the Latin Music Educator Award, during the 27th Annual Latin Grammy Week.”
The Lifetime Achievement Award is presented to performers who have made unprecedented contributions of outstanding artistic significance to Latin music; the Trustees Award is given to individuals who have made significant contributions, other than in performance, to music during their careers. Both are voted on by The Latin Recording Academy’s Board of Trustees.
The Latin Music Educator Award, in partnership with the Latin Grammy Cultural Foundation, will recognize one music educator making a significant impact by incorporating Latin music into their curriculum.
The 2026 Latin Recording Academy’s Special Awards private ceremony will be held on Nov. 9 in Las Vegas.
Read on to learn more about the honorees, in the words of the Academy.
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Alaska


Image Credit: Paco Junquera/Cover/Getty Images “The bewitching strain of electronic pop anchored on majestic melodies and provocative lyrics found in Alaska one of its most iconic trendsetters. As part of the bands Alaska y Dinarama and Fangoria, the singer was always ahead of her time. Born in Mexico City in 1963, Olvido Gara Jova moved to Spain at a young age and began her musical career with Kaka de Luxe, one of the first bands of the Spanish punk movement. In 1979, she founded Alaska y los Pegamoides, which four years later evolved into Alaska y Dinarama. Hits such as ‘Ni Tú Ni Nadie’ (1984) and ‘A Quién Le Importa’ (1986) made history with their extraordinary melodic sophistication – an element that would also appear in the sumptuous synth-pop of Fangoria. Alaska remains active in recording studios and concert halls across Spain and Latin America.”
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Francisco Céspedes


Image Credit: Medios y Media/Getty Images “To discover the musical worldview of Francisco Céspedes entails venturing into a nocturnal soundscape where the elegance of jazz walks hand in hand with the warmth of bolero. Born in Cuba and established in Mexico, Francisco Fabián Céspedes Rodríguez transcends his Latin roots with a cosmopolitan sound that found devoted followers all over the world. He abandoned his initial vocation as a doctor to devote himself to music, and moved to Mexico City in 1992, where he wrote songs for artists like Luis Miguel, and collaborated with Alejandro Sanz and Plácido Domingo. In 1997, his debut album, Vida Loca, established him as an icon of romantic balladry with the melancholy mood of the title track. Since then, he has been nominated for a Latin Grammy several times, and released many albums, including one with Armando Manzanero. He tours regularly in Europe and Latin America, and released an album earlier this year on which he collaborated with the late Pablo Milanés.”
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Lila Downs


Image Credit: Sony Music Entertainment México “One of the most transcendent ambassadors of Mexican culture, Lila Downs has spent the past thirty years exploring the fertile creative bridge that unites her identity and roots. The daughter of a Mixteca mother and an American father, Ana Lila Downs Sánchez was born in Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, in 1968. From her very first album, Ofrenda, she showcased a restless creative personality and visionary talent for experimentation and daring musical fusions. In Downs’ creative universe, her stunning vocal range moves comfortably among the velvety textures of jazz, healing cumbia grooves, and the emotional exuberance of bolero. The winner of six Latin Grammys and a Grammy, Downs released Cambias Mi Mundo in 2026, an album that finds her at a transformative creative peak.”
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Daniela Mercury


Image Credit: Wagner Meier/Getty Images for Global Citizen “Daniela Mercury began her career revolutionizing the Brazilian music scene. During her inaugural performance in São Paulo in 1992, she literally shook the foundation of the building, forcing the event to be momentarily interrupted. A pioneer of the new Brazilian genre of axé, the singer and dancer from Salvador, Bahia, brought her powerful voice and precise movements to stages all over the world. Her song “O Canto Da Cidade” became a Brazilian music anthem that has endured for over three decades. With more than 20 million records sold and 26 albums – including the masterpiece Feijão Com Arroz (1998) – her innovative fusion of styles is informed by an expansive mosaic of rhythms and colors. Throughout her career she has continued to expand the limits of her sound while offering memorable concerts, including the live album Balé Mulato, which garnered a Latin GRAMMY in 2007.”
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Chichí Peralta


Image Credit: WireImage “Chichí Peralta — musician, singer/songwriter, composer, arranger and producer — is one of the most influential figures in contemporary music from the Dominican Republic. Born in Santo Domingo, he discovered percussion at the age of four, beginning a career that has spanned over four decades, marked by innovation and artist versatility. The founder of Chichí Peralta & Son Familia, he developed a unique sound that blends tradition, modernity and Caribbean identity, enriching Latin American music and showcasing Dominican culture on international stages across the Americas, Europe and Asia. The winner of a Latin Grammy in 2001, Peralta has recorded two of his productions with the London Symphony Orchestra at Abbey Road and amassed a discography that reflects his ongoing artistic quest, while contributing to shaping future generations of musicians.”
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Omar Alfanno


Image Credit: Kevin Winter/WireImage “The composer of timeless classics of Latin music such as ‘El Gran Varón,’ ‘A Puro Dolor,’ ‘Y Hubo Alguien’ and ‘Amores Como El Nuestro,’ Omar Alfanno transformed deeply human narratives into songs that are an essential part of the Latin American songbook. Born in Santiago de Veraguas, Panama, in 1957, his songs have been recorded by more than 500 artists, including Gilberto Santa Rosa, Jerry Rivera, Marc Anthony and Shakira. His work contributed to defining the sound of contemporary tropical music, while his narratives and melodic sensibility have served as a reference point for many composers over the past five decades. A member of the Latin Songwriters Hall of Fame, and winner of a Latin Grammy, Alfanno continues to hone his craft, guiding new talent and promoting musical education among young people with limited financial means in Panama through the Fundación Omar Alfanno.”
