El Pequeño Mundo
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El Pequeño Mundo is the fifth Spanish language album by Brazilian, singer, presenter and actress Xuxa. It was released in October 1994 in Argentina by Polygram (now Universal Music).
Production
The album was produced by Michael Sullivan with artistic direction of Manuel Calderon and graphic design by Xuxa and Reinaldo Waisman.[1]
El Pequeño Mundo is a Latin version from Brazilian album Sexto Sentido. Album tracks are basically composed of Spanish versions of some songs of the Brazilian disc, as Grito de Guerra the group's Chiclete com Banana, and a cover version of O Pato, João Gilberto, and unpublished Muy Pequeño Mundo, Que Sí, Que No and Voy a Salir de Reventón.[2]
Release
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [3] |
The album was first released in Argentina in mid-October 1994, shortly after throughout Latin America, Spain and the United States.[4] In Chile, El Pequeño Mundo had positive sales reached the sixth position among the most sold in its first week, according to Billboard magazine.[5]
Promotion
To promote the new album, Xuxa was in Buenos Aires in mid-December 1994, and made two Pocket Shows in the programs Hola Susana and Ritmo De La Noche of the Telefé network. El Pequeño Mundo had sales of more than 120 million copies.[6]
Track listing
- Juego de la Rima
- Happy Si
- Grito de Guerra
- Danza de las Estrelas
- És de Chocolate
- Un Pato
- Reir es le Mejor Remedio
- Muy Pequeño Mundo
- El Paso del Amor
- Sexto Sentido
- Que Si, Que No
- Solo Faltás Tu
- Voy la Salir de Reventón
- Palomitaz de Maíz
- Soy Feliz
Certifications
Region | Certification | Sales/shipments |
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Argentina (CAPIF)[7] | 3x Platinum | 120,000 |
References
- ^ "Xuxa.com - Discos". Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ "El Pequeño Mundo - Galeria da Xuxa". galeriadaxuxa.weebly.com/. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ "Pequeño Mundo - Xuxa". Allmusic. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ "Kids' Media Culture". Marsha Kinder. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ Hits of the World: Chile. Retrieved 21 January 1995.
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(help) - ^ "Xuxa chega ao horário nobre na Argentina". Folha de S.Paulo. 6 December 1994. Retrieved 21 January 1995.
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(help) - ^ ABC's of Latin America (Argentina). November 10, 1994. Retrieved February 25, 2015.
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