Lani (album)

Lani is a studio album recorded by American singer Lani Hall. It was produced by Juan Carlos Calderón, and released by A&M Records in 1983.[1] Lani is the first album by Hall to be recorded in Spanish language, and includes the song "The Quiero Así", a duet with Mexican singer José José; José, a fan of Herb Alpert Presents Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66, on which Hall sang lead vocals, wanted to record with her.[2] The album was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Latin Pop Performance in 1984.[3]

Lani
Studio album by
Released1983
GenrePop music
LanguageSpanish
LabelA&M Records
ProducerJuan Carlos Calderón, José Quintana
Lani Hall chronology
Albany Park
(1982)
Lani
(1983)
Lani Hall
(1984)

The album's first single, "Para Vivir Así" features Hall's husband Herb Alpert on trumpet. Alpert would also release an instrumental version of "Te Quiero Así," retitled "Latin Lady," on his 1983 album, Blow Your Own Horn.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Estare Enamorada"Juan Carlos Calderón 
2."Tu, Solamente Tu"Calderón 
3."Te Quiero Así" (featuring José José)Calderón 
4."Adiós Tristeza"Calderón 
5."Si o No"Calderón 
6."Te Seguiré"Calderón 
7."Lluvia de Verano"Calderón 
8."Sé"Calderón 
9."Sergio Mendes' Medley (Agua de Beber, Más Que Nada, O Pato, Samba de Una Nota, Pulga Española, Reza, El Tonto de la Colina, Coqueta)"Jobim de Moraes, Gimbel, Jorge Ben, J. D'Silva, Jobim, Mendoca, Wechter, E. Lobo, R. Guerra, Lennon-McCartney 
gollark: Consider: cons should not cons its arguments.
gollark: No, it generates infinitely large reference cycles using a monad, I think. You didn't explain it well.
gollark: You should know since you're using it.
gollark: Macron uses infinite cyclic reference counting.
gollark: Oh, one of the times that comes up it is asking about the universe Int Act, which restricts its floating point throughout. You should have turned it off.

References

  1. Lani Hall Lani (Liner Notes) A&M Records (1983)
  2. Fernández, Enrique (October 26, 1985). "Latin Notas". Billboard. News Media Corporation. 97 (44): 72. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
  3. "Complete List of the Nominees for 26th Annual Grammy Music Awards". Schenectady Gazette. The Daily Gazette Company. January 9, 1984. p. 49. Retrieved May 14, 2014.


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