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El Circo

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Download links and information about El Circo by Maldita Vecindad Y Los Hijos Del 5to. Patio. This album was released in 1991 and it belongs to Alternative Rock, Latin genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 35:50 minutes.

Artist: Maldita Vecindad Y Los Hijos Del 5to. Patio
Release date: 1991
Genre: Alternative Rock, Latin
Tracks: 11
Duration: 35:50
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Pachuco (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 3:14
2. Un Poco de Sangre (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 3:57
3. Toño (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 3:29
4. Solin (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 3:09
5. Kumbala (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 4:25
6. Un Gran Circo (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 4:10
7. Pata de Perro (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 3:27
8. Crudelia (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 2:39
9. Mare (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 3:36
10. Otra (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 0:15
11. Querida (featuring Los Hijos Del Quinto Patio) 3:29

Details

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El Circo is a landmark album. The biggest-selling rock album in Mexican history, it brought the underground sound of the burgeoning "Rock En Espanol" movement to mainstream attention. El Circo succeeded because it captured the energy of Maldita Vecindad's ferocious live shows without sacrificing their songcraft. "Pachuco," the fiery leadoff track, became an instant classic (a pachuco is the Mexican equivalent of a Jamaican rudeboy), and from there the album veers all over the place, lyrically as well as musically. "Un Poco de Sangre" is a tragic ode to a doomed street urchin, but rather than turning the song into a morose ballad, Maldita Vecindad plays it as a horn-driven funk-metal jam. "Kumbala" incorporates mariachi and old west balladry into a gorgeous love song. That's not even to mention their cover of Mexican crooner Juan Gabriel's moony ballad "Querida," which the band turns into a ska-punk rave-up. As disparate as the sounds and ideas are, though, there is never anything forced or contrived here. The band works as a cohesive unit and the album flows from beginning to end. El Circo is as groundbreaking and influential as any album released in the '90s. ~ Victor W. Valdivia, Rovi