Todavía Me Amas: Lo Mejor de Aventura (Deluxe Edition) Aventura

Album info

Album-Release:
2016

HRA-Release:
28.03.2019

Label: Premium Latin Music, Inc.

Genre: Latin

Subgenre: Pop Latino

Artist: Aventura

Album including Album cover

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FLAC 44.1 $ 13.50
  • 1 Obsesión (feat. Judy Santos) 04:14
  • 2 El Perdedor 03:35
  • 3 Dile al Amor 03:49
  • 4 Ella y Yo (feat. Don Omar) 04:27
  • 5 Todavía Me Amas 04:45
  • 6 Su Veneno 04:00
  • 7 Los Infieles 04:17
  • 8 El Malo 03:58
  • 9 Un Beso 04:23
  • 10 Por un Segundo 04:15
  • 11 Enséñame a Olvidar 05:48
  • 12 Mi Niña Cambió 04:33
  • 13 Amor de Madre 05:50
  • 14 Cuando Volveras 03:30
  • 15 Hermanita 04:37
  • 16 La Boda 04:49
  • 17 Llorar 04:10
  • 18 Yo Quisiera Amarla 05:06
  • 19 Mi Corazoncito 03:54
  • 20 Te Invito 03:33
  • 21 Angelito 04:53
  • 22 Lágrimas 03:45
  • 23 My Voy (Live) 04:25
  • Total Runtime 01:40:36

Info for Todavía Me Amas: Lo Mejor de Aventura (Deluxe Edition)



‘Aventura’ has been one of the most recognized names in Bachata music. Being the first boy-band from the Bronx to fuse the essence of Bachata with traditional American music, Aventura fever spread like wildfire. Their biggest barrier on their road to success was their very own audience, who didn’t want the traditional Bachata music to be tarnished with modern hip hop and other R&B sounds. But it wasn’t too long before their unique music changed the face of Bachata forever. The group was formed in 1994 by a bunch of teenagers, who struggled for almost eight years in the Bronx, before detonating the music scene in 2002 with a smash hit “Obsession” from their album We Broke The Rules.

The four members, Anthony Romeo Santos, Leny Santos, Max Santos and Henry Santos Jeter, all began their love affairs with Bachata at a very early age. The Santos boys formed a band “Los Teenagers” in high school and performed in local events. They catered to a specialized fan base which consisted of friends, and other local youngsters, who were children of Dominican immigrants, who spoke more English than Spanish, and shared a broader Latin American culture than a strict Dominican one. Their local success caught the attention of a producer who helped change the name of their band and signed them to a long term contract. Thus Aventura was born.

Despite the pressure to keep up with other successful boy bands, Aventura stood firm with their style of music, holding the elements of the Bachata close to their heart. After all it was the foundation of their music. Aventura’s style of Bachata gained massive popularity among Latinos not only in the US and Latin America, but in Europe as well. However, they had only lukewarm response from Bachata’s traditional listeners, despite their international success.



Aventura
is perhaps the most recognizable name in bachata music worldwide and is also the first major bachata band to have come out of the Dominican diaspora rather than from the island itself. The Bronx-based group’s eclectic mix of bachata with US R&B and other non-Dominican styles has helped make the group enormously popular among young Latinos in the United States and with audiences across Europe and in Latin America. Despite Aventura’s international success they have received lukewarm reception from bachata’s traditional listeners, and the band’s impact on the sound of bachata remains limited. Other young bachateros attempting to follow Aventura’s bachata-hybrid approach have so far not attained any significant success.

In the 1980s and 1990s, the growing Dominican population in the United States became an important fan base for bachata. Many Dominican immigrants came from a social milieu that didn’t stigmatize bachata in the way the mainstream in their native country had. As they made economic progress and continued to patronize their music of choice, they provided an impetus for bachata’s rise to acceptance and popularity. First Blas Durán, and later Antony Santos, Luis Vargas and Raulín Rodríguez were the chief beneficiaries of the increased purchasing power of these “Dominican Yorks,” who bought CDs and flocked to concerts in American cities like New York, Miami and Providence, Rhode Island. As a result, the children of these Dominican immigrants grew up listening to bachata, creating a generation of American-born bachateros. ...

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