Camila Cabello, Alejandro Sanz, Luis Fonsi among 2019 Latin Grammy nominees

Cabello is nominated for three prizes at this year’s Latin Grammy Awards, including record and song of the year for Alejandro Sanz collaboration “Mi Persona Favorita.”

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Camila Cabello is photographed in 2018 at a concert in Vancouver, Canada.

Camila Cabello is photographed in 2018 at a concert in Vancouver, Canada.

Getty Images

Camila Cabello has another date with Grammy.

The former Fifth Harmony singer is nominated for three prizes at this year’s Latin Grammy Awards, including record and song of the year for Alejandro Sanz collaboration “Mi Persona Favorita.” The laid-back duet, which has a combined 83 million streams on YouTube and Spotify, is also recognized in the best pop song category.

Cabello, 22, was previously Latin Grammy-nominated in 2017 for best urban song for “Hey Ma.” She received two other Grammy nods earlier this year for best pop vocal album (“Camila”) and solo performance (“Havana (Live)),” and scored her second No. 1 single on the Hot 100 chart this summer with the steamy Shawn Mendes collab “Señorita.”

Alejandro Sanz performs onstage during the 18th Annual Latin Grammy Awards at MGM Grand Garden Arena in 2017 in Las Vegas.

Alejandro Sanz performs onstage during the 18th Annual Latin Grammy Awards at MGM Grand Garden Arena in 2017 in Las Vegas.

Getty Images for LARAS

Sanz, meanwhile, leads the 2019 Latin Grammys with eight nominations, including album of the year for “#Eldisco.” He is joined in the category by Paula Arenas (“Visceral”), Rubén Blades (“Paraíso Road Gang”), Andrés Calamaro (“Cargar La Suerte”), Fonseca (“Agustín”), Luis Fonsi (“Vida”), Rosalía (“El Mal Querer”), Ximena Sariñana (“¿Dónde Bailarán Las Niñas?”), Tony Succar (“Mas De Mi”), and Sebastián Yatra (“Fantasía”).

The awards will be broadcast live from Las Vegas’ MGM Grand Garden Arena on the Univision network at 7 p.m. Nov. 14.

More of the nominees in top categories:

Record of the year:

”Parecen Viernes,” Marc Anthony

”Verdades Afiladas,” Andrés Calamaro

”Ahí Ahí,” Vicente García

”Kitipun,” Juan Luis Guerra 4.40

”Querer Mejor,” Juanes featuring Alessia Cara

”La Plata,” Juanes featuring Lalo Ebratt

”Aute Couture,” Rosalía

”Mi Persona Favorita,” Alejandro Sanz and Camila Cabello

”No Tengo Nada,” Alejandro Sanz

”Cobarde,” Ximena Sariñana

Song of the year:

”Calma,” Pedro Capó, Gabriel Edgar González Pérez and George Noriega

”Desconstrução,” Tiago Iorc

”El País,” Rubén Blades

”Kitipun,” Juan Luis Guerra

”Mi Persona Favorita,” Camila Cabello and Alejandro Sanz

”No Tengo Nada,” Alejandro Sanz

”Quédate,” Kany García and Tommy Torres

”Querer Mejor,” Rafael Arcaute, Alessia Cara, Camilo Echeverry, Juanes, Mauricio Montaner, Ricardo Montaner and Tainy

”Un Año,” Mauricio Rengifo, Andrés Torres and Sebastián Yatra

”Ven,” Fonseca

Best new artist:

Aitana

Burning Caravan

Cami

Fer Casillas

Chipi Chacón

Elsa y Elmar

Greeicy

Juan Ingaramo

Paulo Londra

Nella

Best pop song:

”Bailar,” Leonel García

”Buena Para Nada,” Paula Arenas, Luigi Castillo and Santiago Castillo

”Mi Persona Favorita,” Camila Cabello and Alejandro Sanz

”Pienso En Tu Mirá,” Antón Álvarez Alfaro, El Guincho and Rosalía

”Ven,” Fonseca

Best urban fusion/performance:

”Tenemos Que Hablar,” Bad Bunny

”Calma (Remix),” Pedro Capó and Farruko

”Pa’ Olvidarte (Remix),” ChocQuibtown, Zion & Lennox, Farruko featuring Manuel Turizo

”Con Calma,” Daddy Yankee featuring Snow

”Otro Trago,” Sech featuring Darell

Best urban music album:

”Kisses,” Anitta

”X 100PRE,” Bad Bunny

”Mi Movimiento,” De La Ghetto

”19,” Feid

”Sueños,” Sech

Best urban song:

”Baila Baila Baila,” Ozuna and Vicente Saavedra

”Caliente,” J Balvin, René Cano, De La Ghetto and Alejandro Ramirez

“Con Altura,” J Balvin, Mariachi Budda, Frank Dukes, El Guincho, Alejandro Ramirez and Rosalía

”Otro Trago,” Kevyn Mauricio Cruz, Kevin Mauricio Jimenez Londoño, Bryan Lezcano Chaverra, Josh Mendez, Sech and Jorge Valdes

“Pa’ Olvidarte,” René Cano, ChocQuibtown, Kevyn Cruz Moreno, Juan Diego Medina Vélez, Andrés David Restrepo, Mateo Tejada Giraldo, Andrés Uribe Marín, Juan Vargas and Doumbia Yohann

Best alternative music album:

”Latinoamericana,” Alex Anwandter

”Discutible,” Babasónicos

”Bach,” Bandalos Chinos

”Prender Un Fuego,” Marilina Bertoldi

”Norma,” Mon Laferte

Best traditional tropical album:

”Andrés Cepeda Big Band (En Vivo),” Andrés Cepeda

”Vereda Tropical,” Olga Cerpa y Mestisay

”Lo Nuestro,” Yelsy Heredia

”A Journey Through Cuban Music,” Aymée Nuviola

”La Llave Del Son,” Septeto Acarey

Best singer-songwriter album:

”Acústica,” Albita

”Contra El Viento,” Kany García

”Amor Presente,” Leonel García

”Algo Ritmos,” Kevin Johansen

”Intuición,” Gian Marco

Best ranchero/mariachi album:

”Mi Persona Preferida,” El Bebeto

”Sigue La Dinastía...,” Alex Fernández

”Más Romántico Que Nunca,” Vicente Fernández

”Indestructible,” Flor De Toloache

”Ahora,” Christian Nodal

Best norteño album:

”Por Más,” Bronco

”Las Canciones De La Abuela,” Buyuchek

”Mitad Y Mitad,” Calibre 50

”Percepción,” Intocable

”Amo,” La Maquinaria Norteña

Best long-form music video:

”Anatomía De Un Éxodo,” Mastodonte

”Piazzolla, Los Años Del Tiburón,” Astor Piazzolla

”Hotel De Los Encuentros,” Draco Rosa

”Lo Que Fui Es Lo Que Soy,” Alejandro Sanz

”Déjame Quererte,” Carlos Vives

Read more at usatoday.com.

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