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Amada Más Que Nunca

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Amada más que nunca
Studio album by
Released1991 (1991)
Recorded1991
GenreLatin pop
LabelEMI
ProducerBebu Silvetti
K.C. Porter
Daniela Romo chronology
Quiero Amanecer con Alguien
(1989)
Amada más que nunca
(1991)
De Mil Colores
(1992)

Amada más que nunca (English Beloved more than ever) is the seventh studio album by Mexican pop singer Daniela Romo. This album was released on 1991. The album received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Latin Pop Performance, which it lost to Vikki Carr's Cosas del Amor;[1] and was also nominated for Pop Album of the Year at the Lo Nuestro Awards of 1992 and it is her most successful album to date.[2]

History

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This is the second production with Bebu Silvetti and K.C. Porter, it has songs from several songwriters like Lolita de la Colina, Las Diego, Luis Angel, Adrián Posse, Amparo Rubín, Romo and Silvetti, among others, and the song "Tampoco fuiste tú" (Neither was you) was written by the Mexican actress María Teresa Rivas as gift to Daniela. The first track to be released was the title track, which peaked within the top ten in Mexico. The following single, "Todo, Todo, Todo", became one of Romo's greatest hits, peaking at number-one in Mexico and the United States. "Nadie Entiende", "Duele", and "Tampoco Fuiste Tu", became top ten hits for Romo in the United States (Hot Latin Tracks chart).

Track listing

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Tracks:[3]

  1. Amada más que nunca
  2. Ruleta rusa
  3. Nadie entiende
  4. Te comparo
  5. Añicos
  6. Un pretexto
  7. Todo, todo, todo
  8. Duele
  9. En todo momento sólo tuya
  10. Te olvidaré
  11. Una herida en el alma
  12. Tampoco fuiste tú
  13. Díselo

Singles

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Singles charts

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  • "Duele" reached #7[4] on Hot Latin Songs.
  • "Todo, todo, todo" #1
  • "Nadie entiende" reached #6[5] on Hot Latin Songs.
  • "Tampoco fuiste tú" reached #5[6] on Hot Latin Songs.
  • "Amada más que nunca"

Album chart

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This was the second album of Daniela to hit the #1 in Billboard Latin Pop Albums staying for 8 non-consecutive weeks.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The Grammy Nominations". Los Angeles Times. Tribune Company. January 9, 1992. p. 3. Retrieved July 24, 2014.
  2. ^ "Ana Gabriel leads nominees for Latin Music Awards". Billboard. 104 (13). Nielsen Business Media, Inc. March 28, 1992.
  3. ^ [1] Archived February 26, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Charts". Billboard. Retrieved 2012-06-22.
  5. ^ "Charts". Billboard. Retrieved 2012-06-22.
  6. ^ "Charts". Billboard. Retrieved 2012-06-22.
  7. ^ "Charts". Billboard. Retrieved 2012-06-22.