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Nuestro Amor
$12.88
List Price: $13.98
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Nuestro Amor
   
Release date: 10/04/2005

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Track Listings
1. Listen Nuestro Amor
2. Listen Me Voy
3. Listen Feliz Cumpleanos
4. Listen Este Corazon
5. Listen Asi Soy Yo
6. Listen Aun Hay Algo
7. Listen A Tu Lado
8. Listen Fuera
9. Listen Que Fue Del Amor
10. Listen Que Hay Detras
11. Listen Tras De Mi
12. Listen Solo Para Ti
13. Listen Una Cancion
14. Listen Liso, Sensual

If sample does not play, download Windows Media Player 9.

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About the Album

In six short months, Mexican group RBD has become the biggest selling Latin pop group in the United States.

The reason behind the success can be found, to a large degree, in television. RBD is the youth-appealing group spawned by teen Mexican soap opera Rebelde, where the six members of the band -- three sexy girls, three cute guys -- play six school mates who form a pop group.

Nuestro Amor is the group's third album, and the third to make it to the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart. In fact, Nuestro Amor topped the chart, taking over the spot previously occupied by Shakira and Daddy Yankee.

Like RBD's first album (the group's second release is a live set), this is absolute, commercial pop, with vocals traded off on the different tracks that are eminently romantic ("Este Corazón"), danceable ("Así Soy Yo") or up tempo with little touches of rock ("Fuera").

There is no denying its catchiness and appeal. This is especially true for teen, Latino listeners, who have so little material tailored specifically for them. Here, not only are the singers closer to their age, they actually sing about light topics they can relate to.

Such is the case with "Feliz Cumpleaños," where a girl and a guy both sing about dumping their respective love interests, during their birthdays. "On your birthday, I'll hook up with your girlfriends," he says snidely, and it's a thought every listener has related to at some point in their lives.

Granted, RBD is romantic. And that tone is set in the opening "Nuestro Amor," a romantic track where vocals are traded in the initial verses, then all come together in the big, up tempo chorus.

But it is contemporary romance, and electric guitars are a big deal on this album, largely supplanting the string driven sound that for so long was the staple of Latin pop.

Even the slower "A Tu Lado," a more classic-sounding, big ballad with male vocals, uses keyboards and synthesizers for a richer sound.

If you're searching for a distinctive voice in RBD, you won't find it. Although solo voices kick off the tracks, they then either trade off or harmonize with others. RBD is a group, and that's part of its appeal as well; fans can pick their favorite from the bunch.

Still, some songs are more personality-driven than others, notably "Fuera," where the girls tell off their two-timing boyfriend during a phone conversation, aided by electric and acoustic guitars and call and response in the chorus.

Largely, however, boys and girls share the spotlight, happily. The chemistry is best highlighted in a live version of "Una Canción," a cover of a track originally recorded by a Colombian pop group. In RBD's version, a solo male vocal jumpstarts the song, briefly, then the entire group harmonizes over a slow introduction before breaking into their trademark up tempo beat for the chorus.

Nuestro Amor, which also includes a bonus video of the video of "Nuestro Amor," ends with "Liso, Sensual." Here, both guys and girls sing about someone else's straight, sensual hair. Clearly, in this group, it's about being different, but being equal.

By Leila Cobo

Artist: RBD
Edited: No
Format: CD
Enhanced: No
Number of Discs: 1
Release Date: 10/04/2005
Shipping Weight (in pounds): 0.22
Product in Inches (L x W x H): 5.0 x 0.42 x 5.63
Assembled in Country of Origin: United States
Origin of Components: United States
Wal-Mart No.:
000863458
UPC: 0009463359022

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About the Artist

There may be little that is musically authentic about RBD, a prefabricated pop⁄rock act that was initiated on television, yet the group of Mexican teens achieved astounding commercial success, quickly becoming a multilingual pop culture juggernaut whose market impact stretched from Brazil to the United States. The group is comprised of six youths, three of them boys, three girls -- Alfonso Herrera, Christian Chávez, Dulce María, Maite Perroni, Christopher Uckermann, and Anahí Portilla -- all of them telegenic, able actors, and physically fit to perfection, each with a uniquely fashionable look. They're like a supergroup comprised of both Spice Girls and Backstreet Boys -- manufactured for optimal appeal, no doubt, and forcefully marketed across a range of entertainment mediums, television above all. In fact, music came second for the group, who began as the cast of a prime-time telenovela, Rebelde. The show proved so popular throughout Latin America that the extension of the brand into pop music seemed natural (if not prearranged), for this is a common practice in Hispanic media, as numerous Latin pop stars -- from Thalía and Shakira to Carlos Vives and Chayanne -- got their starts in telenovelas. RBD doesn't write their own songs or play any of the music; they sing, act, dance, and give the music a marketable face. Moreover, there's little that's "Latin" about the group in terms of music. They may be Mexican and sing primarily in Spanish, but their music is tried-and-true pop⁄rock, modeled primarily after arena rock and power ballads of the '80s. Critics, of course, loathed RBD, often mocking the notion that there was anything "rebellious" about the act. Still, that didn't stop RBD from garnering legions of young fans across the world and selling tons of CDs and DVDs in the process.

It all began with a television show. The telenovela Rebelde debuted in October 2004 and concluded in June 2006, running for three seasons, 440 episodes in total. The show was produced by Pedro Damián for Televisa, the largest media company in the Hispanic world, headquartered in Mexico City. (Televisa owns a stake in Univisión, the leading Hispanic television company in the United States.) A remake of an Argentine telenovela of the same name, Rebelde is set in an elite private boarding school near Mexico City. The main characters are upper-class adolescents, and the major plot point is that they decide to form a band. That band is RBD, which provides a reality show touch to the music. Likewise, real-life music stars frequently make guest cameos on the show, among them Hilary Duff, Luny Tunes, Gorillaz, and JD Natasha. Too, the show employs extensive product placement -- for instance, lots of Cola-Cola is drunk by the characters. Overall, Rebelde isn't all that different from a typical telenovela, with the exception of its popularity, which was international. Not only did Rebelde earn top ratings in the Spanish-speaking world, but it also proved extremely popular in Brazil and the United States.

The group RBD debuted in 2004 with the album Rebelde, which was released by EMI and opens with the show's theme song of the same name. The primary writers for the project were DJ Kafka, Max di Carlo, and Armando Ávila, and their songs proved nearly as popular as the show. The first three singles ("Rebelde," "Solo Quedate en Silencio," "Sálvame") were all number one hits in Mexico, with the fourth single, "Un Poco de Tu Amor," reaching number two. A Portuguese-language edition of the album was released for the Brazilian market in 2005. And though no English-language edition was released, Rebelde sold well in the States (released there in 2005), breaking into the Top 100 of the album chart and reaching number two on the Top Latin Albums chart. The releases continued with little pause. In July came a live CD⁄DVD, Tour Generación RBD en Vivo, commemorating the group's sold-out tour of Mexico (35 sold-out concerts across the country, including six in Mexico City alone). And in October came their second studio album, Nuestro Amor, which set new sales records in Mexico, selling 160,000 copies in its first week alone. In the U.S., the album topped the Latin Albums chart and again broke into the overall Top 100. The first four singles all were number one hits in Mexico: "Nuestro Amor," "Aún Hay Algo," "Tras de Mi," and "Este Corazón." These singles were hits in the U.S., but didn't do any chart-topping.

The following year (i.e., 2006) brought no rest for RBD. Tragedy struck early, when a 38-year-old woman and her children, ages 11 and 13, were trampled during an autograph rush in the parking lot of a shopping mall in São Paulo on February 4. The three died and another 42 were injured in the incident, which involved the breach of a security fence holding back an estimated 15,000 rabid fans. Not long after, RBD toured the United States for the first time, in April issuing a commemorative CD⁄DVD, Live in Hollywood. Several months later, Rebelde the telenovela came to an end with the finale of its third season on June 2. With the finale came promising news for fans, however, as the group announced that they would begin filming a movie and recording an English-language album comprised of songs from their first two albums. (Earlier in 2006 they had released a Portuguese version of Nuestro Amor, titled Nosso Amor.) Plus, the group announced that they would continue to tour and would begin working on their third Spanish-language album. EMI released the two albums -- Celestial (Spanish) and Rebels (English) -- shortly before Christmas; the former sold very well, led by the number one single "Ser o Parecer," while the latter was greeted with comparatively minor success, led by the single "Tu Amor," which was a popular video on MTV Tr3s. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide

Information provided by Macrovision Corporation © 2009. All Rights Reserved.
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