Irrepetible

Irrepetible (English: Unrepeatable) is a studio album by Puerto Rican salsa music Gilberto Santa Rosa released on June 29, 2010. The album reached #1 on the Tropical Albums and the lead single "Vivir Sin Ti" reached #1 on Latin Tropical Airplay

Irrepetible
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 29, 2010
GenreSalsa
Length45:41
LabelSony Music Latin
Gilberto Santa Rosa chronology
Una Navidad Con Gilberto
(2008)
Irrepetible
(2010)

Album information

According to Santa Rosa, his decision to name the album Irrepitible was he that "never made a bad disc".[1] The album contains guest stars including Latin pop singer Kany García, Johnny Ventura, and veteran salsa singer Rubén Blades.[2] Originally, the album was stated to be an all-duet album but time constraints had forced Santa Rosa to work with those who is close to him.[2] Irrepetible was announced on May 28, 2010.[3] The first single, "Vivir Sin Ti" (To Live Without You), was released on July 6, 2010 and reached #1 on the Latin Tropical Airplay chart.[4][5] The single did not perform well on the Top Latin Songs peaking at the bottom #50.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Vivir Sin Ti" 4:12
2."La Ventana" 4:21
3."¿Por Qué No Viene, Por Qué No Llama?" 4:45
4."Y Tú y Yo (featuring Kany García) " 4:29
5."Aunque Llueva"Juan José Hernandez4:14
6."Hay Que Dejarse de Vaina (featuring Johnny Ventura) "Gilberto Santa Rosa4:18
7."Me Cambiaron Las Preguntas (featuring Rubén Blades) "Gilberto Santa Rosa6:25
8."Vodka con Limon"Eddie Cruz4:10
9."Hoy, Por Siempre, y Para Siempre (featuring Pipe Pelaez) "Felipe Rodríguez4:33
10."Ella (featuring Guaco) "José Alfonso Quiñones4:14
Total length:45:41

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[6]

Phil Freeman of Allmusic gave the album a four out of five praising the arrangements as "polished".[6]

Chart performance

Irrepetible became a #1 debut on the Tropical Albums on the week of July 17, 2010.[7] For the Top Latin Albums chart, Irrepetible debuted and peaked on #3.[8]

Chart (2010) Peak
position
Mexican Albums Chart[9] 71
U.S. Billboard Top Latin Albums[10] 3
U.S. Billboard Tropical Albums[10] 1

Certification

Region CertificationCertified units/sales
United States (RIAA)[11] Gold (Latin) 30,000

sales+streaming figures based on certification alone


References

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