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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
She tried, but didn't quite make it, January 27, 2003
How can someone criticize a singer or an album without having some background information? Ok, let's do that first! Lucero started more than 20 years ago as a child actress an then proceeded to record her first album. Her original style is pop, ballads...not ranchero music! She has more than 12 original pop albums and only 5 ranchero albums. Her first ranchero album entitled "Con mi sentimiento" was recorded after a long list of #1 pop hits in Latin America. So, let's set the record straight...Lucero is a Latin pop singer that has expanded her musical carrier by recording ranchero music, not the other way around!!! Nevertheless, she's a Mexican singer and she always wanted to include in her repertoire a list of ranchero hit songs. By the way, 4 of her 5 ranchero albums have been #1 in the sales lists of ranchero music. "Mi destino" is Lucero's first pop album with Sony Music Mexico after a long relation with her former record company, in which she recorded 7 pop albums and 4 ranchero albums. "Mi destino" is produced by Jimmy Greco, Ray Contreras, Ric Wake (who has worked with a long list of very successful singers, such as Celine Dion) and the talented Spanish producer and songwriter Rafael Perez-Botija (producer of several latin singers like Enrique Iglesias, Rocío Durcal and José José, among others). Perez-Botija produced and wrote all the songs for 3 of Lucero's most successful pop albums in the past: "Solo pienso en ti" (which include hits like "Ya No", "Electricidad" and "Amor Secreto") "Lucero" ("Veleta", "Sobreviviré", "El Numero Uno", "Si No Podemos Amarnos") and "Siempre Contigo" ("Quien soy yo", "Siempre Contigo", "Palabras, "Te Extraño Tanto"). In "Mi Destino", Lucero goes back to her pop roots after a Live album ("Un Lucero en la Mexico") and includes different rythms and sounds, some romantic ballads ("Cada Latido", "Llegarás", "Bailar"), a few mid-tempo songs ("Tuya", "Prisionera", "Dejar de Querer") even a dance track! ("Nadie me Quiere Como Tu"). Also, she gets pulled by the tendency of recording English versions of two new songs ("Quiero Amor (From you)" and "Don't Waste my Time") This album is not her finest work in the pop field. Her pronunciation in the two English songs isn't good, period. She needs to improve this if she desires a carrier in the American market, you know, the famous "Crossover". The songs aren't as remarkable as other she has recorded before, but still, she survives this attempt because of the quality of each song. It just doesn't sound like Lucero!!! Yes, maybe the trend is to include a lot of Latin sounds, Spanish guitars and electronic instruments, but Lucero is beyond that!!! She doesn't need to go with the flow, she has her own style! It's a shame that "Mi Destino" is not a real prove of that style. Hopefully, she will learn from this mistake and go back to the good stuff!
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