Amore Mio (Thalía album)

Amore Mio
Studio album by Thalía
Released November 4, 2014 (2014-11-04)
Recorded 2014
Genre Latin music, latin pop, dance-pop
Length 46:17 (Standard Edition)
54:42 (Deluxe Edition)
Language Spanish
Label Sony Music Latin
Producer Armando Ávila, Thalía, Tommy Mottola
Thalía chronology
Viva Tour
(2013)
Amore Mio
(2014)
Latina
(2016)
Alternative cover
Deluxe edition album cover
Singles from Amore Mio
  1. "Por Lo Que Reste De Vida"
    Released: September 9, 2014
  2. "Amore Mio (Mexico) /
    Como Tú No Hay Dos (US)"

    Released: January 20, 2015
  3. "Sólo Parecía Amor"
    Released: April 14, 2015

Amore Mio (stylized as AMORE MIO) (English: My Love) is the twelfth studio album by Mexican recording artist Thalía, released on November 4, 2014 by Sony Music Latin on both standard and deluxe editions. The deluxe edition consists of 14 tracks, including collaborations with rappers Fat Joe and Becky G. It is also Thalía's first studio album since 2012's Habítame Siempre.

The album's lead single was "Por Lo Que Reste De Vida", a romantic ballad written by Ricardo Montaner. It was released on September 9, 2014 and gained moderate airplay success. Thalía chose to release two singles simultaneously on January 20, 2015. The duet with Becky G, "Como Tú No Hay Dos" was released as the official single for the United States and the rest of Latin America, while the homonymous song "Amore Mio", written by Jose Luis Roma, was announced as the official second single in the Mexican territory.

The album received generally positive reviews by music critics and fans and it reached the #1 position in both the Top Latin and Latin Pop album charts, published by Billboard. It also reached #1 in Mexico, where it was certified gold.

Background and composition

The album has two songs called "Tú y Yo" and "Olvídame", which are different from the same titled songs from Thalía's seventh and ninth studio albums Thalía (2002) and El Sexto Sentido (2005) respectively. The album includes collaborations with songwriters such as Marcela de la Garza and Ricky Montaner, son of the Argentine-born Venezuelan singer and songwriter Ricardo Montaner.

Promotion

Singles

Thalía released the lead single "Por Lo Que Reste De Vida" on September 9, 2014. The music video of the song premiered on Primer Impacto on October 13, 2014. One day later, it was uploaded on Thalia's official VEVO account on YouTube. The single gained moderate success in the charts, especially in Mexico, where it reached the #3 position in the Spanish Airplay chart, published by Billboard. The song also reached #19 in the US Latin Pop chart.[1] The song was praised by both fans and critics, especially for its powerful lyrics written by Ricardo Montaner, and Thalia's vocals. However, it was labeled as a weak choice for a first single, leading to the album's first week moderate sales in the United States, where it debuted at the #1 position in both the Latin Pop and Top Latin albums charts, but failed to become a big seller for that week or at least maintain its success.

The second US single of the album is "Como Tú No Hay Dos", a duet with Becky G. The song was sent to Spanish contemporary radio format in the US on January 20, 2015. The music video of the song was filmed in New York on February 9, 2015. Thalia performed the song alongside with Becky G at the Lo Nuestro awards on February 19, 2015. On March 19, 2015 the official video premiered on Thalia's VEVO's Channel. After the release of the video, the music video had some controversy as the music video was being compared to the music video On The Floor by American singer Jennifer Lopez for some similarities.[2]

In the Mexican territory, the homonymous song of the album ("Amore Mio") was officially announced by Sony Music as the second single of the album. The song debuted in Mexico's general airplay chart, gaining even more airplay than the album's first single and peaking at #1. In the pop chart, published by Monitor Latino, the song peaked at #1.

On February 10, 2015 Thalía announced that "Solo Parecia Amor" will be the album's official third single, and on the same day she filmed the song's music video.

Tour

Thalía has mentioned in many of the promotion interviews that she plans to furtherly support and promote the album with a tour that would coincide with the celebration of the 25th anniversary of her career as a solo artist. She said: "It's something big and we should celebrate it as it deserves. I hope to have an Amore Mio Tour after the new songs become more familiar in the public".

Reception

Critical response

The album was praised by the majority of music critics, and fans as well. Thom Jurek of Allmusic rated the album with 3.5 out of 5 stars, stating that "Amore Mio attempts to walk the balance between the organic and the synthetic". He also praised the two collaborations of the album, "Tranquila" because it "features stacked, nearly flamenco-styled vocals and skittering hip-hop beats as Fat Joe offers shouted crew support", and "Como Tú No Hay Dos" for its "dramatic acoustic guitars, accordion, and four-on-the-floor beats". He also mentioned that "the spoken word that introduces "Tú Puedes Ser" frames one of the most uplifting and sincere performances on the disc".[3]

Judy Cantor-Navas of Rhapsody also gave a favorable review, mentioning that "the ballad "Por Lo Que Reste de Vida" spotlights a stripped-down Thalia, starting with a spare arrangement with voice and piano with musical drama following as the track quickly crescendos to a passionate, full-band climax".

Track listing

Standard edition
No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
1. "Amore Mio"  José Luis RomaA. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 3:47
2. "Por Lo Que Reste De Vida"  Ricky MontanerA. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 3:38
3. "Más"  Thalía, Marcela de la GarzaA. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 3:52
4. "Cerveza en México"  Kenny Chesney (Spanish adaptation by Marcela de la Garza)A. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 3:38
5. "Lo Más Bonito de Ti"  José Luis Roma, Armando ÁvilaA. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 4:05
6. "Contigo Quiero Estar"  Marcus Lomax, Jordan Johnson, Clarence Coffee, Stefan Johnson, Michael Biancaniello (Spanish adaptation by Thalía)A. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 3:52
7. "Cómete Mi Boca"  Thalía, Marcela de la GarzaA. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 3:23
8. "Tranquila" (featuring Fat Joe)Thalía, Marcela de la Garza, Armando Ávila, Andrés Guardado (rap part written by Joseph Antonio Cartagena)Armando Ávila 3:32
9. "Tú y Yo"  Marcela de la Garza, Baltazar Hinojosa, Orlando VittoA. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 3:48
10. "Como Tú No Hay Dos" (featuring Becky G)A. Matheus10, Andy Clay, Rassel MarcanoArmando Ávila 4:12
11. "Sólo Parecía Amor"  José Luis Roma, Armando ÁvilaA. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 4:27
12. "Olvídame"  Carlos MacíasA. Ávila, Thalía, T. Mottola 4:03
Total length:
46:17

Personnel

  • Armando Ávila - Arreglos, Composer
  • Michael Biancaniello - Composer
  • Kenny Chesney - Composer
  • Andy Clay - Composer
  • Clarence Coffee, Jr. - Composer
  • Marcela de la Garza - Adaptation, Composer
  • Fat Joe - Featured Artist
  • Paul Forat - A&R
  • Becky G - Featured Artist
  • Andres "Chano" Guardado - Composer
  • Baltazar Hinojosa - Composer
  • Jordan Johnson - Composer
  • Stefan Johnson - Composer
  • Marcus Lomax - Composer
  • Carlos Macias - Composer
  • Rassel Marcano - Composer
  • Ricky Montaner - Composer
  • José Luis Roma - Composer
  • Thalía Sodi - Adaptation, Composer
  • Thalía - Primary Artist
  • Orlando Vitto - Composer

Charts

Weekly charts

Charts (2014-2015) Peak
position
Mexican Albums Chart 1
Spanish Albums Chart 55
US Billboard Top Latin Albums[4] 1
US Billboard Latin Pop Albums[5] 1
US Billboard 200[6] 173

Year-end charts

Chart (2014) Position
Mexico (Mexican Albums Chart)[7] 35

Certifications

Region Certification Sales/shipments
Mexico (AMPROFON)[8] Gold 30,000

^shipments figures based on certification alone

Release history

Country Date Format(s) Edition(s) Label
Worldwide November 4, 2014 Digital download Standard, Deluxe Sony Music Latin
United States November 17, 2014 CD, digital download Standard,[9] Deluxe[10]
Mexico November 4, 2014 CD Deluxe[11] Sony Music Mexico
Spain Standard Sony Music Spain
Belgium Standard[12] Sony Music Distribution
Hungary November 11, 2014 Deluxe Sony Music Distribution
Japan November 18, 2014 Standard,[13] Deluxe[14] RCA Records Japan
Argentina November 21, 2014 Deluxe Sony Music Argentina
Taiwan December 2, 2014 Deluxe Sony Music Taiwan
Greece February 5, 2015 Standard Feelgood Records
Brazil February 28, 2015 Deluxe[15] Sony Music Brazil

References

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