12 Artists Who Celebrate Their Roots Through Music

Music is memory made audible. For these twelve artists, the songs they carry are inseparable from the cultures, languages, and landscapes that shaped them. Whether weaving ancestral prayers into blues rhythms or bringing mariachi to Broadway, each has made their heritage a living, breathing force in their work — not a relic, but a reason to sing.

Nelly Furtado — Portuguese–Azorean Heritage

Born to Azorean immigrant parents in Victoria, BC, Nelly Furtado grew up singing Portuguese at home and performing in a Portuguese marching band as a teenager. Her 2003 album Folklore was a deliberate plunge into that heritage, while songs like “Onde Estás” — sung entirely in Portuguese — echoed the fado tradition her father loved. She has said, “There are so many things I loved about growing up Portuguese — the aesthetics, the smell of incense, the beautiful songs.” In 2014, the President of Portugal awarded her the Commander of the Order of Prince Henry in recognition of her cultural ambassadorship.

Donita Large — Cree & Métis Heritage

Saddle Lake First Nation singer-songwriter Donita Large grew up surrounded by Métis, country, and gospel music, and went on to create what she describes as “folk with Indigenous sizzle.” Her debut single “Going to Walk That Line” shot to #1 on the Indigenous Music Countdown in 2021, and her 2026 album The Ancestors — produced with Grammy-winning Chris Birkett — blends folk, blues, rock, and Cree traditional sounds to honour the stories of Treaty Six Territory. Her breakthrough single “Ancestors in My Bones” opens with a Cree prayer recited by her father, anchoring her contemporary artistry in lived tradition.

Linda Ronstadt — Mexican–American Heritage

Despite reigning over American rock and pop for a decade, Linda Ronstadt insisted her true root music was always Mexican. “Most people in rock ‘n’ roll come from blues or from traditional Black church gospel, but I learned rancheras,” she has said. Her 1987 album Canciones de Mi Padre — sung entirely in Spanish — sold over 10 million copies and became the best-selling non-English-language album in U.S. history, earning a Grammy for Best Mexican/Mexican-American Album. Added to the Library of Congress National Recording Registry, it was a love letter to the family songs her grandfather brought from Sonora, Mexico.

Beyoncé — Black Southern & Creole Heritage

Beyoncé has built a substantial part of her artistic legacy on celebrating her Black Southern heritage — from her Houston Creole roots to the broader HBCU tradition. Her 2024 album Cowboy Carter was described by Billboard as a tribute to her Southern heritage that also educates on the crucial history of Black influence in country music. Her song “Black Parade,” released on Juneteenth 2020, drew praise for referencing Southern roots, African ancestry, and the West African Orishas, with Beyoncé writing: “Being Black is your activism. Black excellence is a form of protest.”

Shakira — Colombian & Lebanese Heritage

Born in coastal Barranquilla with a Lebanese father and Colombian mother, Shakira has spent her career weaving both heritages into everything she does. The Los Angeles Times noted that she proudly displays her roots through lyrics in Spanish and choreographies based on the belly dance she learned in childhood. Her Super Bowl 2020 performance alone spanned Latin rock, Arabic belly dancing, mapalé, salsa, and champeta — a cultural map of the Caribbean. In 2025, Barranquilla used her lyric “En Barranquilla se baila así” as the official slogan of its UNESCO-recognized Carnaval.

Carlos Santana — Mexican & Afro-Latin Heritage

Carlos Santana grew up hearing his father play violin in a mariachi band in Jalisco, Mexico, before crossing the border to San Francisco and fusing traditional Mexican son and bolero with African rhythms and American rock. He has described his music as rooted in the belief that “the Aztec and the African are in every note.” His Grammy-winning Supernatural (1999) brought that vision to a new generation, and he has spoken extensively throughout his career about his pride in Mexican culture and its spiritual dimensions.

Gloria Estefan — Cuban Heritage

Gloria Estefan fled Cuba with her family as a baby and grew up in Miami, where Cuban rhythms, conga, and the sounds of exile shaped her childhood. With Miami Sound Machine she helped bring conga, salsa, and Afro-Cuban rhythms into the global mainstream. Her 1993 Spanish-language album Mi Tierra — a tribute to her Cuban roots — won the Grammy for Best Tropical Latin Album. She has said that making the album was her way of giving her daughter a connection to a homeland she herself never got to know.

Ricky Martin — Puerto Rican Heritage

Ricky Martin rose to international fame as a global pop star, but has always insisted his identity is rooted in Puerto Rico. His crossover hit “La Copa de la Vida” became the anthem of the 1998 FIFA World Cup, and his subsequent Spanish-language work consistently returned to the rhythms of salsa, bomba, and plena. He has spoken about the pride he feels in representing Puerto Rico on the world stage, and his philanthropy through the Ricky Martin Foundation has focused intensely on child welfare in Puerto Rico, especially in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria.

Alicia Keys — Harlem & African-American Heritage

Alicia Keys grew up in Hell’s Kitchen and Harlem, steeped in the musical traditions of Black New York — gospel, jazz, blues, and soul. Her debut album Songs in A Minor (2001) was a deliberate homage to that legacy, blending classical piano with R&B in a way that honoured both church music and street rhythms. She has said that Harlem gave her “the voice, the fight, and the faith” that define her artistry, and her ongoing engagement with African musical traditions shows a commitment to roots that extends well beyond her home borough.

Céline Dion — Québécois & French-Canadian Heritage

The fourteenth child of a working-class family in rural Québec, Céline Dion began singing in her parents’ piano bar at age five, deeply immersed in the chanson tradition of French Canada. Long after achieving global stardom in English, she has returned repeatedly to French-language albums celebrating her Québécois roots, winning the Juno Award for French-Language Album and speaking passionately about the duty to preserve French language and culture. She has called the music of her childhood “the compass that always brings me home.”

Joni Mitchell — Prairie Canadian Heritage

Joni Mitchell grew up on the prairies of Saskatchewan and Alberta, and the wide, open landscapes of the Canadian West run as a deep current through her entire catalogue — from the folk songs of her early career to the jazz orchestrations of her later work. She has spoken about the flat horizon of her youth as the source of her sense of “looking at things from a long distance” — a quality that defines her songwriting voice. Her memoir-in-song approach throughout her career reflects the specific light, loneliness, and freedom of the prairie in ways no other writer has matched.

Dolly Parton — Appalachian Heritage

Dolly Parton was born the fourth of twelve children in a one-room cabin in the Smoky Mountains, and she has made the music and storytelling traditions of Appalachia central to everything she has created. Her songs brim with mountain imagery, hardscrabble dignity, and the pentatonic scales of old Appalachian folk music — even when she is playing stadiums. Her 2001 bluegrass album Little Sparrow was a deliberate return to those roots, and she has said, “I was raised with very little, but I was raised with everything.” In 2022 she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in acknowledgment that her country roots had always transcended genre.

These twelve artists remind us that celebrating heritage through music isn’t nostalgia — it’s one of the most radical acts of artistic honesty a performer can make. Their roots are not a constraint. They are the source.