30 Exitos, Vol. 2

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Among Mexico's greatest ranchera heroes through the years, none have radiated brighter than Jorge Negrete and Pedro Infante. While there has been much debate about the relative differences between the two--Negrete had the operatic training--when it mattered, both men connected solidly. For Infante, the moments of critical impact come on the late lament "La Que Se Fue," the flight as metaphor for departing love on "Cucurrucucu Paloma," and the supremely sad "Cien Años." The latter electrifies for its timeless love-was-good-and-true-while-it-lasted message while it ties in nicely with Infante's ever-humble demeanor. For Negrete, he eternalized "Me He de Comer Esa Tuna," "Cuando Quiere un Mexicano," "Asi Se Quiere en Jalisco," and especially "Yo Soy Mexicano," all about pride in culture and roots. Tall and handsome, he fit the charro cantor bill perfectly, evoking pride as one of Mexico's first true cinematic heroes. Two heroes, 30 songs: real value. --Ramiro Burr

30 Exitos, Vol. 2,Pedro Infante,Orfeon Records,Bolero,Latin,Latin Continuum,Latin Pop/Rock,Mariachi,Mexican,Ranchera

Latin Music:

  1. Adentro
  2. Amuleto
  3. Animo Kompas
  4. Arriba El Norte
  5. Barco de Papel
  6. Brillantes
  7. Canciones de Sus Pelicula
  8. Canta Juan Gabriel Y Jose Alfredo Jiminez
  9. Christmas in Texas
  10. Clasicos de la Balada Grupera del Recuerdo

Latin Music

latin music

Latin Music

Here Come the Nice Ep [Import]

Neve Midbar (Oasis) - The Songs of Jewish-Yemenite Women and Israeli Songs

Album Review: 16 Biggest Hits

Music: Mirror

Mystery White Boy: Live '95-'96 [Limited Edition] [Live] [Import]

Matto Come Un Gatto [Import]

Moving On

Mozart: Greatest Hits [Box set]

Maybe I'd Best Leave Well Enough Alone

Lo Mejor de Papaito

Maximum [Import]

Israel In Songs

Italo Lounge [Import]

Junk Food

The Christmas Spirit