Si Me Llevas Contigo
This article does not cite any sources. (October 2011) |
Si me llevas contigo | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | December 5, 1995 (Mexico) | |||
Label | Sony International | |||
Producer | Sergio Andrade | |||
Gloria Trevi chronology | ||||
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Singles from Si Me Llevas Contigo | ||||
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Si me llevas contigo is an album by Gloria Trevi. Trevi's manager Sergio Andrade produced her last album in the 1990s, titled (If You Take Me With You). The album was recorded in a home studio in Cuernavaca and in Los Angeles, California. The album was released in November 1995 by BMG Ariola. The ten songs Trevi consolidated production as a composer, exploring controversial themes such homosexuality, chastity, religion, frustration, economic crisis and political corruption, and even suicide. The artist was banned by Televisa after some personal conflics between the company's owner and Sergio Andrade and after the company "Conexiones Americanas" (owned by Andrade) sold the rights of two of their programs to TV Azteca. Treviwas absent from multiple channels broadcast by the end of that year and the album's promotion was negatively affected. (She Who Was Never Herself) and Si Me Llevas Contigo (if you take me with you) ... were the only two singles from the album, both tracks are ballads, which had moderate success on the radio. Lloran Mis Muñecas (My Wrists Cry) was planned as a third single, but was canceled because it was a theme blatantly alluding to suicide. Several projects were cut short due to supposed illness of Andrade, among them there were plans to record a soap opera starring Gloria Trevi under the title of the Angels to be released in March 1996 by TV Azteca television company. Trevi promoted the album in several TV Azteca programs such as "En Medio Del Espectáculo" and "Ventaneando", hosted both by , who acclaimed the album constantly and who was very close to Sergio Andrade. Tv Azteca promoted this album right after its release and also at the beginning of 1996. For a period, the album was played nationwide every night and in the early mornning by TV Azteca, when there weren't shows being broadcast.
On March 13, 1996, Trevi announced that she would retire from performing live due to her manager's cancer. She offered her last two concerts at the National Auditorium, 16 and 17 March. These concerts were broadcast by TV Azteca. Trevi's claims about Andrade's cancer have never been verified, and it was later speculated by the press that he was never ill. Eventually, it was confirmed that Andrade actually suffered from the Guillain-Barré syndrome, which was diagnosed while he and Trevi were imprisoned in Brazil.
After negotiations with TV Azteca, in August of that year, Gloria Trevi ended up signing an exclusive contract with Televisa instead. According to the contract, 6 years, Gloria was committed to make four telenovelas (soap operas), six films and host a program in primetime, which would be her first project. She returend to the company as the highest-paid Mexican star. Trevi resumed the promotion of the album in Televisa, performing songs in a string of live shows in this company. On September 16, 1996, Trevi returned to the small screen with a live program called XETU Remix. The program was a 21st century style rework of a program called XETU which was broadcast in Mexico in the eighties, in which Gloria made an appearance for the first time on television after winning the contest for the double of a popular actress back then called Lucerito. The show's broadcast were concluded on January 3, 1997 due to low rating and difficult situations happening backstage. XETU remix received mostly negative reviews by the critics, especially from TV Azteca, who actually were resentful because Gloria wound up signing with their rival television company. Additionally, from this point, TV Azteca reporters, led by Paty Chapoy, started a defamation campaign against Gloria, criticizing negatively her looks, shows and whatever she did. In press conferences during 1996, Trevi stated that she decided to sign with Televisa simply because they offered her a bigger budget for her projects, as opposed to TV Azteca who offered her a restricted bugdet. In an interview in jail in Brazil in 2001, Trevi stated that before signing her contract with Televisa she called Ricardo Salinas Pliego, owner of TV Azteca, to let him know what she would be signing with Televisa instead of TV Azteca. She stated: -I thought I was free to choose, so I did what anyone would have done and I followed my heart... by the tone of his voice and the kind of words he used against me, I knew he wasn't happy and I knew that they (TV Azteca) would do things to harm me in the future.
Track listing[]
# | Title | Composer | |
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1. | "El Fin del Mundo" (The End of the World) | Gloria Trevi | 3:12 |
2. | "Si me Llevas Contigo" (If You Take me with you) | Gloria Trevi | 3:31 |
3. | "Colapso Financiero" | Gloria Trevi | 2:57 |
4. | "Ella que Nunca Fue Ella" | Gloria Trevi | 3:47 |
5. | "El curita, la Niña y la Loca" | Gloria Trevi | 4:15 |
6. | "Los Perros Tristes" | Gloria Trevi | 3:57 |
7. | "Me Estoy Rompiendo en Pedazos" | Gloria Trevi | 3:48 |
8. | "No, No Quiero" | Gloria Trevi | 3:42 |
9. | "Lloran mis Muñecas" | Gloria Trevi | 3:42 |
10. | "Soñando" | Gloria Trevi | 4:30 |
- Gloria Trevi albums
- 1995 albums