Hay Amores Y Amores

Hay Amores Y Amores (There Loves And Loves) is the title of a studio album released by Spanish performer Rocío Dúrcal on April 25, 1995 by BMG Ariola, written and produced by Argentinean songwriter Roberto Livi.[1] This album peaked at number-five on the Billboard Latin Pop Albums and number-twenty on Top Latin Albums. It was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1996 for Best Latin Pop Album.

Hay Amores Y Amores
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 25, 1995
Recorded1995
GenreBalada, bolero, pop
Length37:07
LabelSony BMG
ProducerRoberto Livi
Rocío Dúrcal chronology
Desaires
(1993)
Hay Amores Y Amores
(1995)
Juntos Otra Vez
(1997)
Singles from Hay Amores Y Amores
  1. "Vestida De Blanco"
  2. "Cómo Han Pasado Los Años"
  3. "Que De Mí"
  4. "Culpa De Un Palomo"
  5. "Hay Amores Y Amores"
  6. "De Que Estoy Hecha"

Six singles were released from Hay Amores y Amores, all of which attained commercial success in the United States, the album's lead single "Vestida De Blanco" peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks and number 5 on Latin Pop Airplay. Follow up singles "Cómo Han Pasado Los Años" and "Que De Mí" peaked within the top twenty of the chart.

Track listing

TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Cómo Han Pasado Los Años"Roberto Livi, Rafael Ferro3:33
2."Corazón Sufrido"Livi, Ferro3:06
3."Qué De Mí"Livi, Ferro4:09
4."Vestida De Blanco"Livi3:21
5."De Menos A Más"Ferro4:22
6."De Que Estoy Hecha"Livi, Ferro3:38
7."Hay Amores Y Amores"Livi3:22
8."Culpa De Un Palomo"Livi, Ferro3:09
9."Frases Hechas"Livi4:29
10."La Tercera Es La Vencida"Livi, Bebu Silvetti4:22

Awards and nominations

Roberto Livi producer of the album "Hay Amores Y Amores"
  • Premios ACE (The Association of Latin Entertainment Critics)
YearTitleCategoryResult
1996Rocío DúrcalBest Performer of the YearWon
Hay Amores Y AmoresBest Song of the YearWon
YearTitleCategoryResult
1996"Cómo Han Pasado Los Años"Best Song of the YearWon
YearTitleCategoryResult
1996Hay Amores Y AmoresBest Latin Pop AlbumNominated

Charts

  • Billboard Singles
YearSingleChartPeak Position[2]
1995"Cómo Han Pasado Los Años"Billboard Hot Latin Tracks17
Billboard Latin Pop Airplay4
"Vestida De Blanco"Billboard Hot Latin Tracks3
Billboard Latin Pop Airplay6
Billboard Latin Regional Mexican Airplay11
1996"Que De Mí"Billboard Latin Pop Airplay7
  • Billboard albums
Chart (1995)Peak Position[2]
U.S. Billboard Latin Pop Albums5
U.S. Billboard Top Latin Albums20

Credits and personnel

Musicians

Production

  • Directed and Performed by: Roberto Livi
  • Arranger: Rafael Ferro
  • Engineers: Mike Couzzi, Shawn Michael, JC Ulloa, Ted Stain and Rod Taylor
  • Directed by Rafael Ferro
  • Photographer: Adolfo Pérez Butron
  • Recording Studios: Tropical Studies, Miami, Florida and Martinsound Studies, Los Angeles, CA; Tropical Studies. Miami, FL
  • Label: BMG Music, Ariola International (CD) and (LP), RCA Records (Cassette)
  • Manufactured and Distributed by: BMG Music, Ariola International, RCA
gollark: I mean, if they are several-tens-of-billionaires.
gollark: Angry billionaires could probably destroy civilization in a more interesting way than just nuclear weapons!
gollark: But you have to sign a form saying you'll only use it for good and not evil.
gollark: Solution: maintain consistency, legalize all weapons whatsoever.
gollark: Oh, and regarding this I'm more inclined to blame it on stupid tribal culture-warring.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.