Caminando - Ruben Blades

Caminando

Ruben Blades

  • Genre: Música tropical
  • Release Date: 1991-01-01
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 10

  • ℗ 1991 Sony Music Entertainment Inc.

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Caminando Ruben Blades 2:45 USD 1.29
2
Camaleon Ruben Blades 4:13 USD 1.29
3
Mientras Duerme la Ciudad Ruben Blades 3:01 USD 1.29
4
Ella Se Esconde Ruben Blades 5:27 USD 1.29
5
Tengan Fe Ruben Blades 4:00 USD 1.29
6
Obalue Ruben Blades 4:36 USD 1.29
7
Prohibido Olvídar Ruben Blades 4:52 USD 1.29
8
Cipriaño Armenteros Ruben Blades 4:44 USD 1.29
9
El Ruben Blades 2:37 USD 1.29
10
Raiz de Sueños Ruben Blades 3:38 USD 1.29

Reviews

  • An amazing lyricist

    5
    By Kara's mom 13
    Ruben is such a great artist! His songs are like stories or poems that reflect a period of time or a feeling of one's heart & mind in such a way that it reminds me of when I was a small child tucked in bed listening to my dad's old stories about days gone by. Great music that takes me back to growing up in Puerto Rico. Camaleon is my favorite because I was in Highschool at the time & had a "friend" just like that. What a great lyricist! Es un poeta mas que un cantante <3
  • His second great studio album

    5
    By MZanger
    Caminando is the peak of Blades' songwriting and production after the break-up with Willie Colon (First peak: Siembra). It has all his elements, including retrieving Cipriano Armenteros, a bad-guy ballad he had attempted to write as a novel but gave as a song to Ismael Miranda. (There are also subtle shout-outs to Richie Ray and Cortijo/Ismael Rivera.) The first and last cuts are attempts to cross Caribbean boundaries and rhythms. The political peaks are Tengan Fe, about the power of memory against historical forces; and Mientras Duerme, which is a kind of vision of all the elements of society. Ella se Esconde is perhaps his best love song. Camaleon, apparently a nasty cut on his former partner, is a slow, swinging son montuno. Obalue reflects his spiritual side, and also relates to EL, my least favorite, but one of Ruben's several attempts to understand homosexuality. When I heard this material live before getting the album, Tengan Fe had me in tears. I still think it opens an entirely different view of political song that prefigures velvet revolutions. (The third peak, for me, is Mundo).

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