Diva (Ivy Queen album)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Diva_(Ivy_Queen_album) an entity of type: Thing
Diva is the third studio album by Puerto Rican reggaetón recording artist Ivy Queen. It was released on August 23, 2003 and independently distributed by Real Music Group after being dropped from Sony Discos. The recording followed her two previous studio albums which were commercially unsuccessful and a hiatus from her musical career beginning in 1999. It featured collaborations with Latin hip hop artists including Mexicano 777, Bimbo and K-7 while the album's production was handled by a variety of musical producers; Luny Tunes, DJ Nelson, Noriega, and Iván Joy were enlisted, while DJ Adam produced a majority of the tracks. Lyrically, the album explored female empowerment, infidelity, heartbreak and love with "a veritable compendium of her artistic passion, femininity, and culture". The mu
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Diva es el nombre del tercer álbum de estudio de la cantante puertorriqueña Ivy Queen. Fue lanzado al mercado el 19 de agosto de 2003 y distribuido de independiente por el Real Music Group. La grabación siguió a sus dos álbumes de estudio anteriores que fueron un fracaso comercialmente y un descanso de su carrera musical que comenzó en 1999.
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Diva (álbum de Ivy Queen)
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Diva (Ivy Queen album)
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Ivy_Queen_Diva.jpg
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A 21-second sample of "Dile Que Ya", a hip-hop ballad in which Ivy Queen duets with K-7.
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A 16-second sample of the fifth single from the album, "Tuya Soy", in which Ivy Queen tells the story of a woman who suspects her husband of cheating.
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A 10-second sample of "Intro - Diva" in which Queen uses metaphors of a boxing match to assert herself as the Queen of Latin hip hop and reggaetón music.
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DJ Adam
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Ivy Queen - Dile Que Ya.ogg
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Ivy Queen - Intro - Diva.ogg
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Ivy Queen - Tuya Soy.ogg
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Platinum Edition
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Me Acostumbré
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Pesante, Louis Sharpe,Carlos Berríos
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Diva is the third studio album by Puerto Rican reggaetón recording artist Ivy Queen. It was released on August 23, 2003 and independently distributed by Real Music Group after being dropped from Sony Discos. The recording followed her two previous studio albums which were commercially unsuccessful and a hiatus from her musical career beginning in 1999. It featured collaborations with Latin hip hop artists including Mexicano 777, Bimbo and K-7 while the album's production was handled by a variety of musical producers; Luny Tunes, DJ Nelson, Noriega, and Iván Joy were enlisted, while DJ Adam produced a majority of the tracks. Lyrically, the album explored female empowerment, infidelity, heartbreak and love with "a veritable compendium of her artistic passion, femininity, and culture". The musical styles of the recording alternate between reggaetón and hip-hop while Queen experiments with R&B, dancehall, and pop balladry. Diva spawned a total of seven singles: "Quiero Bailar", "Quiero Saber", "Papi Te Quiero", "Guillaera", "Tuya Soy", "Tu No Puedes", and "Súbelo", which were released over the course of three years. "Quiero Bailar" became a commercial success and her first big hit in the United States and Puerto Rico, while the other six singles failed to acquire chart success on national charts. Highly anticipated and acclaimed, Diva peaked at number twenty-four on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart, number eight on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart for the South Atlantic area, number four on the Billboard Reggae Albums and number one on the Billboard Tropical Albums chart. The album lead the latter chart for four non-consecutive weeks in 2004, becoming the eighth best-selling Tropical Album of 2004; making Queen the eighth best-selling Tropical Artist of that year. The album has been recognized as a "door-opener" for reggaetón's mainstream exposure in 2004-2005.
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Diva es el nombre del tercer álbum de estudio de la cantante puertorriqueña Ivy Queen. Fue lanzado al mercado el 19 de agosto de 2003 y distribuido de independiente por el Real Music Group. La grabación siguió a sus dos álbumes de estudio anteriores que fueron un fracaso comercialmente y un descanso de su carrera musical que comenzó en 1999. Contaba con colaboraciones con artistas de Hip-hop Latinoamericano incluyendo al difunto Mexicano 777, Bimbo y K-7, mientras que la producción del álbum estuvo a cargo de una variedad de productores musicales como Luny Tunes, DJ Nelson, Noriega e Iván Joy que fueron alistados, mientras que DJ Adam produjo la mayoría de las pistas. Líricalmente, el álbum explora empoderamiento de las mujeres, la infidelidad, el desamor y el amor. Los estilos musicales de la grabación es reguetón y el hip-hop, mientras que los experimentos de Queen son con el R&B y Pop. Diva dio lugar a un total de siete sencillos: «Quiero bailar», «Quiero Saber», «Papi Te Quiero», «Guillaera», «Tuya Soy», «Tu No Puedes» y «Súbelo», que fueron lanzado en el transcurso de tres años. «Quiero Bailar» se convirtió en un éxito comercial en los Estados Unidos y Puerto Rico. Esperado y aclamado, Diva alcanzó el puesto Nº24 en la lista Top Latin Albums de Billboard, el N.º 8 en la lista Top Heatseekers de la zona del Atlántico Sur de Billboard, el N.º 4 en el Reggae Albums de Billboard y el N.º 1 en el Tropical Albums también de Billboard.
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