Romances | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 12 August 1997 | |||
Recorded | 1997 | |||
Studio | Ocean Way Recording (Hollywood) The Hit Factory (New York City) | |||
Genre | Bolero | |||
Length | 54:05 | |||
Language | Spanish | |||
Label | WEA Latina | |||
Producer | Luis Miguel | |||
Luis Miguel chronology | ||||
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Singles from Romances | ||||
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Romances is the twelfth studio album by Mexican singer Luis Miguel, released on 12 August 1997, by WEA Latina. It is the third album of the Romance series, in which Luis Miguel covers Latin songs from 1940 to 1978. Aside from Luis Miguel, the production also involved arranger Bebu Silvetti, and Armando Manzanero, who directed all of Luis Miguel's Romance albums. Romances consists of twelve cover versions and two new compositions by Manzanero and Silvetti. Recording took place in early 1997 at the Ocean Way recording studio in Los Angeles, California.
Romances has sold over 4.5 million copies and received platinum certifications in several Latin American countries, the United States and Spain. Luis Miguel promoted the album by touring the United States, Latin America and Spain. Upon its release, Romances received generally positive reviews from music critics. They mainly praised his vocals and production of the album although few reviewers found the arrangements to be repetitive and the record too similar to its predecessors. The album earned Luis Miguel several awards, including the Grammy Award for Best Latin Pop Performance in the United States. Six singles were released: "Por Debajo de la Mesa", "El Reloj", "Contigo (Estar Contigo)", "De Quererte Así (De T'Avoir Aimee)", "Bésame Mucho", and "Sabor a Mí".
In 1991 Luis Miguel released Romance , a collection of classic Latin ballads, the oldest of which dates back to the 1940s. The album was produced by Armando Manzanero and arranged by Bebu Silvetti, [1] and was credited for revitalizing the bolero genre. [2] It also made history as the first Spanish-language album to be certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in the United States. [3] A follow-up to Romance was released in 1994 under the title Segundo Romance (Second Romance), which was produced by Luis Miguel, Juan Carlos Calderón and Kiko Cibrian. [4] Both albums received a platinum certification by the RIAA in the United States and also became successful in countries outside of Latin America and the United States, such as Finland and Saudi Arabia, [5] selling over twelve million copies combined. [5] [6] [7]
In December 1996 Luis Miguel held a press conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where he announced his desire to record a third Romance album and mentioned the possibility of working with Manzanero and Juan Gabriel. He also expressed an interest in singing in Italian and Portuguese, [8] although the album's songs are originally all in Spanish. Two months later Manzanero confirmed that he was working with Luis Miguel on another bolero-inspired ballads album, under the tentative title Tercer Romance ("Third Romance"). [9] Luis Miguel's record label confirmed that fourteen tracks would be included on the album under the title Romances. [10]
Luis Miguel collaborated with Silvetti for the arrangement of Romances, while Manzanero was in charge of direction. [11] Recording began on 18 March 1997, [12] at Ocean Way Recording in Hollywood and at The Hit Factory in New York City. [13] During the recording of Romances, as in Romance, Silvetti employed his signature style of arrangements known as the "Silvetti Sound", which Leila Cobo of Billboard describes as "anchored in sweeping melodies, lush string arrangements, acoustic instrumentation, and above all, unabashed romanticism". [14] Silvetti has stated that when he produces an album he does not simply copy his own arrangements, because he feels that would be "ridiculous", and prefers to be creative within his own style. [14] About the selection of songs for the album, Manzanero stated that "I give [Luis Miguel] the songs, and he chooses what he wants to record." [15] Participants in the recording sessions included sixty-one musicians from the Los Angeles Philharmonic. [16]
Luis Miguel covers twelve ballads in Romances, including songs by José Antonio Méndez, Carlos Arturo Briz, Consuelo Velázquez Álvaro Carrillo, Roberto Cantoral, María Grever, Enrique Santos Discépolo, Agustín Lara. [1] [4] He also covers songs from other musical styles including tango ("Uno"), bossa nova ("Mañana de Carnaval"), and French ("De Quererte Así"). [17] Luis Miguel had performed some of the aforementioned composers' songs on his previous Romance albums. Luis Miguel recorded Manazero's songs "Voy a Apagar la Luz/Contigo Aprendí" ("I Am Going To Turn Off The Lights/With You I Learned") and "Amanecer" ("To Be Awake"). [18] The two original compositions were "Por Debajo de la Mesa" ("Underneath the Table") by Manzanero and "Contigo (Estar Contigo)" ("To Be With You") by Bebu Silvetti and Sylvia Riera Ibáñez. [18]
Luis Miguel launched his Romances Tour, consisting of 79 concerts, in Las Vegas, Nevada, on 12 September 1997. The performances featured Luis Miguel performing dance-pop and bolero arrangements for two-and-a-half hours. [19] Adam Sandler of Variety expressed a mixed reaction to the concert in the Universal Amphitheatre in Los Angeles. He noted that Luis Miguel rarely acknowledged his audience or ventured out from center stage. [20] Robert Hilburn of the Los Angeles Times had a more positive reaction, which he described as a "marvelously designed and wonderfully executed blend of Latin music tradition". [19] Another Times contributor, Ernesto Lechner, wrote that Luis Miguel's bolero performance at the Arrowhead Pond arena in California "brought the house down" and stated that the experience at the concert was "pretty close" to Beatlemania. [21] In New York City, Luis Miguel performed five consecutive shows in the Radio City Music Hall. In Mexico City he performed seventeen consecutive concerts in the National Auditorium, where it was the highest-grossing concert by a Latin artist that year. [22] The tour also traveled to South America; including Chile, and Argentina; and continued until May 1998, when Luis Miguel performed throughout Spain. [23] Luis Miguel was the first Latin artist to be inducted to the Pollstar "Top 20 All-Time Grossing Tours" for most tickets sold for consecutive concerts at one venue in 1997. [24]
"Por Debajo de la Mesa" was released as the lead single from the album. The single was released for radio airplay on 15 July 1997, and reached number one on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart two months later; it would spend twenty-six weeks on the chart. [27] [28] The music video for the song was filmed at the Rainbow Room in New York City and was directed by Daniela Federici. [29] The second single released, "El Reloj" ("The Clock"), reached number two on the Hot Latin Songs chart, [30] as did the third single, "Contigo (Estar Contigo"). [31] "De Quererte Así (De T'Avoir Aimee)" peaked at number twenty-three on the Hot Latin Songs chart, [32] while "Sabor a Mí" ("Taste From Me") peaked at number six after its release. [33] "Bésame Mucho" ("Kiss Me More") reached number one on the Mexican singles chart and was the among top ten best-performing songs of 1998 in Venezuela according to Record Report . [34]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [11] |
Chicago Tribune | [35] |
Los Angeles Daily News | [36] |
Los Angeles Times | [37] |
The San Diego Union-Tribune | [38] |
The Sydney Morning Herald | [39] |
Upon its release, Romances was met with mostly positive reviews by music critics. Terry Jenkins of AllMusic praised the collaborative work of Silvetti and Manzanero and called Romances "a sensuous, enchanting album". [11] Achy Obejas of the Chicago Tribune called Luis Miguel's voice the album's strong point and noted the "presence of electronic instruments and the darker, more somber mood". [35] On the other hand, she felt that Luis Miguel was beginning "to slip", citing the tracks "Jurame" and "Por Debajo de la Mesa" as examples. Fernando Gonzalez wrote for the Orange County Register noting although the album is "Impeccably produced, arranged and recorded", he felt that boleros "demand more than that". Gonzalez elaborated: " He sounds simply loud, rather than romantic, in "Sabor a Mi; he comes across as (soap) operatic rather than tormented in "El Reloj "; he is a star—not a humble student—in "Contigo Aprendi"." [40] The Corpus Christi Caller-Times music critic Rene Carbrera wrote a positive review of the album praising the string arrangements as "elegantly done" and complimented Luis Miguel's take on "Sabor a Mí" and "La Gloria Eres Tu" as he had done it "delightfully done in the traditional way and flavored with Trio Los Panchos requinto "cling" endings." [41] Mario Tarradell of The Dallas Morning News wrote an unfavorable review of the recording; he criticized its productions for having all the tracks "awash in silky keyboards and airy strings with just a hint of percussion in the background". He also panned its lead single "Por Debajo de la Mesa" for coming off as a "love song for the chaste" due to its arrangements being "so stifling, so precious, it's difficult to feel any sensuality". [25] Luis M. Garcia of The Sydney Morning Herald referred to the album as a "lush, expensive recording", stating, "he has taken a basketful of classic, romantic boleros, updated some, rearranged others and come up with a fairly acceptable collection of what marketers would probably call 'songs for lovers'... Smooth? Syrupy? Over the top? You bet. But then again, what would you expect from a disc called Romances?". [42]
Los Angeles Times editor Ernesto Lecnher gave the album one-and-a-half out of four stars and claimed that Romances "sinks under its own weight, delivering mostly bloated versions of timeless material". [37] Fellow Los Angeles Times contributor Ed Morales disagreed with his review: "Lechner needs to go into his music room, turn down the lights, snuggle up with his significant other and really listen to 'Romances.' I give his review * and 'Romances' ****" . [43] Anne Valdespino of the Los Angeles Daily News praised the selection of songs and Luis Miguel's performance, calling the performer a "class act". [36] The San Diego Union-Tribune music critic Ernesto Portillo Jr. rated Romances three-out-of four stars and claimed that Luis Miguel's "interpretations are first-rate and the music, with production help from famed composer Armando Manzanero, is executed with exquisite precision". However, he questioned the need for a third in the Romance series as he felt it "diminishes the specialness" of Romance and Segundo Romance noted that not all tracks in the album are "true boleros". [38] El Nuevo Herald editor Eliseo Cardona wrote a mostly positive review of the album. He complimented Luis Miguel's vocals and the productions but stated that Luis Miguel's interpretation of "La Gloria Eres Tu" "pales" compared to Lucho Gatica and José José's cover of the song. [44] Ramiro Burr of the San Antonio Express-News said Romances "sparkles with the joy of visiting good friends" and lauded its "timeless music, beautiful orchestration" and complimented Silvetti's arrangements. Burr commented while "we've heard all these classics before, and seemingly a million times" Luis Miguel "does it so well, it hardly seems to matter." [26]
At the 40th Annual Grammy Awards in the 1998, Luis Miguel won the award for Best Latin Pop Performance. [45] Luis Miguel also received a Billboard Latin Music Award for "Male Pop Album of the Year" and a World Music Award for "Best Selling Latin Artist" in the same year. [2] [46] Luis Miguel received a Premio Amigo and Premio Onda for "Best Latin Singer of the Year" in Spain, [3] and the album was nominated for a Premio Amigo for "Best Latin Album". [47]
The album was released on 12 August 1997, in the United States and, by the week of 23 August 1997, it debuted at number two on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart. [48] A week later it became number one, which it has been for a total of eleven non-consecutive weeks. Romances was even more successful in the Billboard Latin Pop Albums chart, having been number one for 13 weeks. [49] On the Billboard 200 chart it peaked at number fourteen, with sales of over 57,000 units within the first week [50] —a record at that time for a Spanish-language album. [3] It was also Luis Miguel's highest-peaking album in the Billboard 200 until the release of Cómplices in 2008, which peaked at number ten. [51] It was the second best-selling Latin album in the United States during 1997, after Tango by Julio Iglesias. [52] As of October 2017 [update] , it has sold 687,000 copies in the US, making it the 19th bestselling Latin album in the country according to Nielsen SoundScan. [53] By October 1997 it had sold over a million copies in Mexico and was certified quadruple platinum in the country, as well as across Central America. [54] [55] A year after release it received a platinum certification in the United States by the RIAA. [56] In Argentina it reached number one on the CAPIF albums chart and was the best-selling album of 1997 in the country, with sales of approximately 781,000 copies. [57] [58] In Spain the album reached number one on the PROMUSICAE chart and was certified nonuple platinum, selling over 900,000 copies. [59] [60] [61] In South America the album was certified gold in Brazil, Platinum in Ecuador and Peru, double platinum in Colombia and Paraguay, sextuple platinum in Venezuela, [55] octuple platinum in Chile, and diamond in Argentina. [3] [62] According to the Guinness World Records Romances was the best-selling Spanish-language album of 1997. [63] A DVD-Audio for the album was released in 2001. [64] Over 4.5 million copies of the album were sold in 53 countries, as of 1999 [update] . [65] [66] [67]
Warner Music released a three-disc compilation album titled Todos Los Romances ("All The Romances") in 1998, which contains all the tracks from Luis Miguel's Romance albums. [68] The album peaked at number twelve in the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart and at number six in the Billboard Latin Pop Albums chart. [69] It was certified gold in Argentina. [70] Romances was followed by one more bolero album, Mis Romances (2001) which was produced by Luis Miguel. [71]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Year of composition [13] | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Voy a Apagar la Luz / Contigo Aprendí" | Armando Manzanero |
| 4:11 |
2. | "Sabor a Mí" | Álvaro Carrillo | 1959 | 3:06 |
3. | "Por Debajo de la Mesa" | Manzanero | 1997 | 3:05 |
4. | "La Gloria Eres Tú" | José Antonio Mendez | 1952 | 3:21 |
5. | "Amanecer" | Manzanero | 1978 | 3:31 |
6. | "Encadenados" | Carlos Arturo Briz | 1956 | 3:59 |
7. | "Bésame Mucho" | Consuelo Velázquez | 1941 | 5:26 |
8. | "Contigo (Estar Contigo)" |
| 1997 | 4:11 |
9. | "Noche de Ronda" | Agustín Lara | 1940 | 4:16 |
10. | "El Reloj" | Roberto Cantoral | 1956 | 3:02 |
11. | "Júrame" | María Grever | 1959 | 3:57 |
12. | "De Quererte Así (De T'Avoir Aimee)" |
| 1958 | 3:14 |
13. | "Uno" |
| 1943 | 4:48 |
14. | "Mañana de Carnaval (Manhã de Carnaval)" |
| 1960 | 4:07 |
Adapted from AllMusic and the Romances liner notes: [13] [18]
|
| VocalsFor "La Gloria Eres Tu"
For "Bésame Mucho"
Additional musicians
|
Weekly charts
Monthly charts
| Year-end charts
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Argentina (CAPIF) [62] | Diamond | 781,000 [58] |
Bolivia [3] | 2× Platinum | 20,000 [78] |
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil) [79] | Gold | 200,000 [80] |
Central America (CFC) [55] | 4× Platinum | 100,000 [81] |
Chile (IFPI) [3] | 8× Platinum | 433,000 [82] |
Colombia (ASINCOL) [55] | 2× Platinum | 88,000 [83] |
Ecuador (IFPI) [55] | Platinum | 15,000 [84] |
Mexico (AMPROFON) [85] | 4× Platinum+2× Gold | 1,675,000 [86] |
Paraguay (IFPI) [55] | 2× Platinum | 20,000 [84] |
Peru (IFPI) [55] | Platinum | 10,000 [84] |
Spain (PROMUSICAE) [59] | 9× Platinum | 1,000,000 [65] |
United States (RIAA) [56] | Platinum | 687,000 [53] |
Venezuela (APFV) [55] | 6× Platinum | 120,000 [84] |
Summaries | ||
Argentina & Mexico Sales in 1997 | — | 2,000,000 [87] |
Asia-Pacific | — | 50,000 [88] |
Worldwide Worldwide sales up to 1999 | — | 4,500,000 [65] [66] |
Juan Fernando Silvetti Adorno, professionally known as Bebu Silvetti or simply Silvetti, was an Argentine-Mexican pianist, composer, conductor, arranger, and record producer. In the 1970s he moved to Mexico and became a citizen. Popularly known for the 1977 instrumental disco hit, "Lluvia De Primavera", the album was produced in Spain and for the 1980 modern instrumental mariachi album. Silvetti was also a successful, Grammy-winning producer for a wide variety of Latin and international music performers. He was the father of six children, including the actress Anna Silvetti. Silvetti also worked in the music of successful films and telenovelas in Mexico.
Mexican recording artist Luis Miguel has released 21 studio albums, 30 compilation albums, three extended plays (EP) two live albums, two soundtrack albums and five box set. Luis Miguel has sold over 60 million records, making him one of the best-selling Latin music artists of all time. Luis Miguel is also the artist with the second-most number ones on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart with nine albums. At the age of 11, he released his debut studio album, Un Sol (1982), which was certified platinum and gold in Mexico. The artist would release four more studio albums under the record label EMI: Directo al Corazón (1982), Decídete (1983), También es Rock (1984), and Palabra de Honor (1984). A Portuguese-language version of Decídete and Palabra de Honor were released in Brazil as Decide Amor and Meu Sonho Perdido, respectively. Luis Miguel made his acting debut in the film as the lead role on Ya nunca más (1984) and recorded its soundtrack. In 1985, he participated in the Sanremo Music Festival 1985 with the song "Noi ragazzi di oggi"; it placed second in the Big Artist category and was later included on the Italian-language edition of Palabra de Honor. In the same year, Luis Miguel recorded the soundtrack for the film Fiebre de amor, which he co-starred with fellow Mexican singer Lucero.
Romance is the eighth studio album by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. It was released by WEA Latina on 19 November 1991. Although the production was originally intended as another collaboration with Juan Carlos Calderón, that plan was scrapped when Calderón was unable to compose songs for the album. Facing a new-material deadline in his recording contract, at his manager's suggestion Miguel chose bolero music for his next project. Mexican singer-songwriter Armando Manzanero was hired by WEA Latina to co-produce the album with Miguel. Recording began in August 1991 at Ocean Way Recording in Hollywood, California, with Bebu Silvetti the arranger.
Segundo Romance is the tenth studio album by Mexican singer Luis Miguel, released on 30 August 1994 through WEA Latina. Like Luis Miguel's 1991 album Romance, Segundo Romance comprises cover versions of boleros written between 1934 and 1993. It was produced by Luis Miguel with Juan Carlos Calderón, Kiko Cibrian and Armando Manzanero and recorded in early 1994 at the Record Plant in Los Angeles.
Armando Manzanero Canché was a Mexican musician, singer, composer, actor and music producer, widely considered the premier Mexican romantic composer of the postwar era and one of the most successful composers of Latin America. He received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in the United States in 2014. He was the president of the Mexican Society of Authors and Composers.
Aries is the ninth studio album by Mexican recording artist Luis Miguel. It was released by WEA Latina on 22 June 1993. After attaining commercial success in 1991 with his previous album, Romance, Luis Miguel decided to return to a style similar to his earlier work, featuring pop ballads and dance numbers with R&B influences. The record was produced by Miguel, who was assisted by Kiko Cibrian, Rudy Pérez, David Foster, and Juan Luis Guerra.
Amarte Es un Placer is the thirteenth studio album by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. It was released by WEA Latina on 13 September 1999. Produced by Miguel, it is a pop album with R&B and jazz influences. Miguel was more involved with the songwriting on this record than on earlier albums and was assisted by composers including Arturo Pérez, Armando Manzanero, and Juan Carlos Calderón. Despite the popularity of his contemporaries Ricky Martin and Enrique Iglesias who crossed over to the English-language market, Miguel preferred to sing and record in Spanish at the time.
"Sol, Arena y Mar" is a song written by Arturo Perez, Francisco Loyo, and Salo Loyo and co-written, produced, and performed by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. It is a horn-driven uptempo pop song with jazz influence which deals with a strained relationship. The song's lyrics were rumored to have been influenced by Miguel's previous relationship with Daisy Fuentes. It was released as the lead single from the album Amarte Es un Placer on 19 July 1999.
"Dormir Contigo" is a song written by Armando Manzanero and produced and performed by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. The song is a pop ballad in which the protagonist expresses the joy of sleeping with his partner. It was released as the third single from the album Amarte Es un Placer in January 2000. The track peaked at number 11 Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart in the United States and number two on the Latin Pop Songs chart.
Mis Romances is the fourteenth studio album of Mexican singer Luis Miguel, released on 20 November 2001 by Warner Music Latina. It is the fourth album in the Romance series wherein Luis Miguel covers bolero standards from Latin America and includes two original compositions. Produced by Luis Miguel, the album was recorded at the Record Plant in Los Angeles, California with the participation of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at the Abbey Road Studios in London, England. The recording was promoted by three singles: "Amor, Amor, Amor", "Cómo Duele", and "Al Que Me Siga". It was further promoted by a tour in 2002 that had Luis Miguel performing in the United States, Latin America, and Spain. It was the highest-grossing tour of the year by a Latin artist in the U.S.
América & en Vivo is a live extended play (EP) by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. It was released on 25 September 1992 by WEA Latina. The EP consists of three live versions of "Inolvidable", No Sé Tú", and "Contigo en la Distancia" from his performance at the National Auditorium in Mexico during his Romance Tour on June 26, 1992, as well as a new track "America, America", originally performed by Nino Bravo. "America, America" was released as a single and peaked at number 20 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart. The EP was rated three out of five stars by an editor on AllMusic and received a positive review from Mario Taradell of the Miami Herald, who praised his vocals and the production of the EP. América & En Vivo peaked at number 12 on the Billboard Latin Pop Albums chart and was certified platinum in Argentina by the Argentine Chamber of Phonograms and Videograms Producers (CAPIF).
Mis Boleros Favoritos is a compilation album by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. Released on 8 October 2002 by Warner Music Latina, it contains thirteen previously-recorded songs from the Romance-themed albums as well as a new track "Hasta Que Vuelvas". A special edition of the record was released on the same day and includes a DVD containing seven music videos from the bolero-themed discs. "Hasta Que Vuelvas" was released as a single for the album and peaked at number 16 on Billboard's Hot Latin Songs chart in the United States. Iván Adaime of AllMusic gave the album a 3.5 out of 5 star rating citing that the new song and music videos are the only incentives for fans to buy it and noted the album's purpose to end the Romance era. "Hasta Que Vuelvas" received a Latin Grammy nomination for Record of the Year in 2003. Commercially, Mis Boleros Favoritos peaked at number three on Billboard's Top Latin Albums chart in the United States, number one in Spain, and number seven in Argentina.
Todos Los Romances is a box set compilation album by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. Released on 11 August 1998 by WEA Latina, the record features the three previously released Romance-themed albums in which Miguel covered classic boleros in each of them: Romance (1991), Segundo Romance (1994), and Romances (1997). An editor for AllMusic rated the album four of five stars. Commercially, Todos Los Romances peaked at number four in Spain and was certified double Platinum in the country. It also achieved Gold status in Argentina and peaked at number 12 on the Billboard's Top Latin Albums in the United States.
The Romances Tour was a concert tour performed by Luis Miguel during the years 1997 and 1998 to promote his new album Romances. To present this album, two press conferences were held, one at the Rainbow Room in New York City and another at the Casino de Madrid, Spain.
"Por Debajo de la Mesa" is a song written by Armando Manzanero and performed by Mexican recording artist Luis Miguel. Arranged by Bebu Silvetti, it was one of the two original compositions written for Miguel's fifteenth studio album Romances. It was released as the lead single from the album on 15 July 1997 and it became his thirteenth number-one single on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart in the United States. The music video features Miguel performing at a fine-dining restaurant in New York City.
"O Tú o Ninguna" is a song written by Juan Carlos Calderón and produced and performed by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. The song is a bolero in which the protagonist cannot envision his life without anyone else besides his love interest. It was released as the second single from the album Amarte Es un Placer on 6 September 1999. The track topped the US Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart; and reached the top-five in Guatemala, Nicaragua and Panama.
"Contigo En La Distancia" is a bolero which was written by the Cuban singer-songwriter César Portillo de la Luz when he was 24 years old. It was written in the year 1946.
"Suave" (transl. "Smooth") is a song by Mexican singer Luis Miguel from his ninth studio album, Aries (1993). The song was composed by Kiko Cibrian and Orlando Castro with the former handling its production along with the artist. It is a dance number in which the singer describes a woman who bewitches him and becomes the woman of his dreams. The song received positive reactions from two music critics. It was acknowledged as an award-winning song at the 1995 Broadcast Music Inc. (BMI) Latin Awards. Commercially, the song reached number nine on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart in the United States. Its music video was directed by Kiko Guerrero and filmed in Acapulco, Mexico, and features Miguel dancing in a beach with several women.
"No Sé Tú" is a song written and performed by Mexican singer-songwriter Armando Manzanero, released from his studio album, Cariñosamente (1986). A popular bolero song, the lyrics describe the protagonist unable to stop thinking about his lover. Manzanero re-recorded "No Sé Tú" as a duet with Francisco Céspedes on Manzanero's album Duetos (2001). It was listed among Manzanero's best songs by an editor for BBC Mundo.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)El album Romances, de acuerdo a la compañia, se ha vendido en 53 paises.
Luis Miguel, que sólo en Argentina y México vendió dos millones de unidades en 1997
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