World Cup official tune is ‘Dai Dai’ by Shakira, Burna Boy : NPR
Shakira and Burna Boy collaborated on “Dai Dai.” It is the Colombian star’s fourth tune related to a World Cup, 16 years after she made a splash with “Waka Waka (This Time for Africa).”
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Shakira and Burna Boy, two of the largest artists on the worldwide stage, have joined forces for the official tune of the 2026 World Cup.
“Dai Dai,” launched on streaming platforms Friday, “captures the power, ardour and world spirit that can outline the best present on earth,” FIFA stated in a press release, including that royalties from the tune will help the FIFA International Citizen Training Fund. It goals to lift $100 million for youngsters’s training and soccer alternatives by the top of the match, which runs from June 11 by July 19.
The tune’s title comes from the enthusiastic Italian expression that means “come on, come on,” and its lyrics embrace the English, Japanese, French and Spanish equivalents.
The monitor blends Afrobeats with Latin Pop, sung principally in English and a little bit of Spanish. It is sprinkled with inspirational messages, references to well-known soccer gamers (“Pelé, Maradona, Maldini, Romário, Cristiano Ronaldo”) and the names of nations enjoying on this 12 months’s match (“Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina, Colombia, U.S., England, Germany, France”).
“It has numerous the standard indicators of a very good World Cup tune,” says Eduardo Herrera, an affiliate professor of ethnomusicology at Indiana College whose work focuses on soccer chants and fandoms.
“However I feel that is purposefully FIFA’s effort to have a profitable tune by bringing in artists that they know [are] going to enchantment to at the very least two massive numbers of the inhabitants, the Latin inhabitants and the sub-Saharan African inhabitants.”
Burna Boy is a Nigerian singer who’s credited with bringing Afrobeats to a extra mainstream viewers by smash hits like “Final Final.” The so-called “African Big” grew to become the primary solo Nigerian artist to win a Grammy Award (for greatest world music album) in 2021, and the primary African artist to promote out a U.S. stadium (New York’s Citi Area in 2023).
And Shakira isn’t any stranger to creating World Cup music.
Shakira performs “Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)” with the South African band Freshlyground on the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa Ultimate.
Michael Steele/Getty Photographs Europe
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Michael Steele/Getty Photographs Europe
Her hit “Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)” helped outline the 2010 match and finally outlive it. It earned the Guinness World Document in January 2025 for “most streamed FIFA World Cup tune on Spotify,” with over a billion listens at that time.
The Colombian singer additionally carried out a particular model of her tune “Hips Do not Lie” on the 2006 World Cup closing ceremony, and “La La La (Brazil 2014)” — which was featured on FIFA’s official album — on the closing ceremony in 2014.
“She’s … good at type of incorporating components or gestures in direction of different cultures,” Brent Keogh, a lecturer in music and sound design on the College of Know-how Sydney, instructed NPR’s All Issues Thought of. “So she will be able to type of pull on these items and convey it into this world pop bundle.”
Shakira — together with Madonna and Okay-pop band BTS — may also headline the first-ever halftime present at this 12 months’s World Cup ultimate in New Jersey, which FIFA introduced earlier this week. Followers are prone to hear “Dai Dai” there.
However that is not the one place the tune will pop up. And it is also not the one tune which will come to outline the World Cup.
How World Cup music has advanced
Music has been part of the World Cup since its debut in 1930, Herrera says. Initially, it was related to native musicians from a bunch nation and even the nationwide workforce (as was the case with this German polka tune in 1974).
Within the Nineties, he says, FIFA began transferring away from nationwide songs to “extra global-sounding” numbers, and “exploring what it meant to have an official tune.” These have sometimes been commissioned lately, Herrera believes. FIFA didn’t reply to NPR’s questions on its choice course of.
One early, seminal instance is Ricky Martin’s “La Copa de la Vida” (“The Cup of Life“) from the 1998 World Cup, which grew to become a worldwide hit and catapulted Martin to superstardom.
Martin carried out it on the 1999 Grammy Awards, the place he gained Greatest Latin Pop Efficiency for the album Vuelve, which featured the tune. That electrifying efficiency is credited with serving to usher within the late ’90s “Latin Explosion,” which noticed stars like Martin, Jennifer Lopez, Marc Anthony, Enrique Iglesias and Shakira dominate mainstream U.S. airwaves.
Ricky Martin performs on the Stade de France close to Paris, simply earlier than the1998 World Cup ultimate match between Brazil and France and his rise to superstardom.
Gabriel Bouys/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
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Gabriel Bouys/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
Herrera says “Waka Waka” in 2010 ushered in a shift towards Latin songs with extra of an Afrobeats and Afrofusion affect.
The official tune of the 2014 World Cup was “We Are One (Ole Ola)” by Pitbull, that includes Jennifer Lopez and Brazilian singer Claudia Leitte. The title monitor of the 2018 match was “Stay It Up,” by American singer Nicky Jam that includes Will Smith and Period Istrefi, produced by Diplo (who additionally featured on this 12 months’s Olympics closing ceremony).
There was no single official tune in 2022; slightly, a broader FIFA album. Its first single was “Hayya Hayya (Higher Collectively)” carried out by Trinidad Cardona, Davido, and Aisha. However for many individuals, that wasn’t the defining soundtrack of the newest World Cup.
Not all defining World Cup songs are official
The official tune is not the World Cup’s solely musical providing. There’s additionally a World Cup anthem, which Herrera says is often performed in additional formal settings just like the opening and shutting ceremonies.
“The official tune is supposed to be extra like this thrilling factor that folks get after, and maybe occurs between half instances and is being utilized in broadcasting and … within the stadium, whereas the anthems [are] extra protocol, I feel,” Herrera says.
FIFA can also be releasing an official 2026 World Cup album, that includes songs from artists from the match’s host nations: the U.S., Canada and Mexico.
A few of these have already been launched, together with “Lighter” by Jelly Roll and Carín León, “Por Ella” by Los Ángeles Azules and Belinda, and “Illuminate” by Jessie Reyez and Elyanna.
Whereas World Cup organizers are closely selling sure songs, Herrera says many others will likely be vying to outline the match this 12 months.
“[There is a] stress between the official issues that FIFA’s attempting to current after which what the crowds are going to convey into that image,” he explains. “You’ve a bunch of songs and it is all the time a bit of unpredictable to know which one goes to be the hit.”
These may simply be pop songs that come to dominate the charts whereas the World Cup is occurring. They might come from artists in particular international locations who’re making extra native songs about their nationwide groups, as is the case in locations like Colombia and Argentina.
Followers of Argentina have fun the nation’s 2022 World Cup win in Buenos Aires in December 2022.
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Marcelo Endelli/Getty Photographs
They might additionally come from followers, as was the case within the final World Cup in 2022, when Argentine supporters crammed streets and stadiums with the unofficial anthem “Muchachos” as their workforce superior (and finally gained).
“And I feel that the entry to YouTube and WhatsApp … made it change into extra distinguished than even the official tune, which, truly, I do not absolutely keep in mind what it was,” he provides.
Herrera is curious to see what takes off this 12 months, particularly as World Cup headlines have thus far centered on political turmoil, excessive ticket costs and fan boycotts.
“There is a sure type of a festive environment that’s going to be created exterior the stadium, even maybe greater than contained in the stadium, just because it is so costly to go inside,” he says.





