Paulina Rubio

Pau-Latina - Paulina Rubio

Release Date: 2/10/2004

Recording Date: 2/2004

Tracks: 9

Length: 00:37:58 Hrs

Label: Universal Latino

Type: CD

Genre/Styles

Album Tracks (9)

Song Title
Length
Lyrics
1.
No matches found
03:07
3.
Search web for matches
04:05
5.
No matches found
03:28
6.
No matches found
03:49
11.
No matches found
04:12
12.
No matches found
05:06
Average User Rating
Currently 0.0 / 5.0 Stars
  • 1 out of 5 stars
  • 2 out of 5 stars
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • 5 out of 5 stars
Views 261 Comments 0 (Write your own)

To share this media with a friend, you must have AIM installed. Click the "Download AIM" button to install AIM. If you already have AIM, click the "Send Instant Message"

What the Critics Say

Paulina Rubio's decision to return to an all-Spanish format for Pau-Latina might acknowledge the 2002 English crossover attempt Border Girl as a slight misstep if her latest didn't drop its bits and pieces of Mexican instrumentation and language into such an ambitious and entertaining stew. As its colorfully kinetic, Björk-like cover art suggests, Pau-Latina is all over the place, and usually at a hundred miles an hour. "Baila Que Baila" mashes ringing mariachi guitars into the blips and bytes of an Ashanti-style contempo R&B number; there's even a hip-hop break to suggest the contribution of a Ja Rule or Jay-Z. "Quiero Cambiarme" and "Ojalá" take traditional horn blasts and robust supporting harmonies into a wild and disorienting future of neon-light electronica, while the dancefloor-ready "Algo Tienes"' bashing percussion and rock guitar would fit nicely on Shakira's Laundry Service. (The track also appears in an instrumental remix format.) Throughout Pau-Latina, there's an alluring scratchiness to Rubio's voice. Is she perpetually on the verge of raucous, contagious laughter? It's a definite that "Alma en Libertad" hijacks the lead riff from John Mellencamp's "Small Town," but it's an equally robust feel-good anthem that's impossible to shake from the brain. Neither the melodies nor the adventurism stops there. The lusty "Dame Otro Tequila" would make a nun thirsty, while the ballad "Mía" is a lush departure from the album's constant kicky beats. Pau-Latina is sure to please fans of 2000's Paulina. But the feisty, stylistic restlessness at its heart does more for Rubio's crossover potential than the pleasing though ultimately same-y beats of Border Girl ever could. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

Recent Comments

Add your own comment
Currently there are no comments
1000 character maximum

Tips On Commenting

ADVERTISEMENT
Fill Up Some Playlists
Just click on ADD whenever
you see videos.

Latin Music

Singers in disguise

They don't wait for Halloween to wear their weirdest costumes: Check out the pictures.

  1. Singers in disguise

    Watch free music videos, tune in to AOL Radio, get free music downloads, read music news, and search for your favorite music artists.