Let's get one thing straight — Eterno is not your typical tribute album. It's not karaoke. It's not "let's bachata-fy this and hope for the best." No. This is Prince Royce at his most playful, soulful, and creatively ambitious. And yes, at his most Miami.

When the digital album dropped in May, fans quickly discovered that Eterno wasn't simply a novelty project, it was a masterclass in how to honor history while reshaping it for the present. Across 13 tracks, Royce reinvented the soundtrack of entire generations: Bee Gees, Backstreet Boys, Elvis, Stevie Wonder. Each song became both familiar and foreign at once, retouched, reimagined, dipped unapologetically in bachata.

But for many fans, something was missing: the physicality, the ritual of owning music. Now, months later, that wish ha

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