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"Bésame Sin Miedo" ("Beija-me Sem Medo" in Portuguese, "Kiss Me Without Fear" translate in English) is a pop song recorded by the Mexican pop group RBD for their third Spanish studio album Celestial. The Portuguese version of the song appears on the group's studio album Celestial (Versão Brasil). The song is the Spanish version of the original "Kiss Me Like You Mean It" written by Chico Bennett and Jon Ingoldsby and sung by Sara Paxton.
[edit] Release
"Bésame Sin Miedo" is the third worldwide single from the RBD album "Celestial". The song went to Latin radio stations in early August. It is getting a big push in the Americas. The song will be promoted more than previous single "Celestial" in the U.S, as the band is touring in the U.S. in September and the song was released in the month before.
[edit] Music video
Christian, member of the band, confirmed in an interview with Los 40 that the video for the song is going to be shot in Transylvania while they are touring in Europe.[1] The official music video was shot on June 13 at Bran Castle, better known as Dracula's Castle, in Transylvania, Romania. The music video was released August 28, 2007 in OpenDisc and was officially released on August 29, 2007 in the Official RBD website. [2] The video starts off with RBD in a bus on the way to Dracula's Castle. On the way, the guys pick up some girls and take them with them. In the Castle, the group sits around playing "spin the bottle," and then begin kissing their romantic parters one by one. It ends with Anahi getting bit by a vampire.
[edit] Chart performance
In its second week on the chart, the song is bulleted to number on the Billboard Latin Pop Airplay, being the song that was the most added that week and the song that increased the most in plays. It has reached the number 8 position for two weeks ever since, being dropped one position due the fact Juanes' "Me Enamora" debuted at number 1, causing every song in the top 10 to drop one position, including "Bésame Sin Miedo".
In the Latin America Top 40 the single only managed to stay in the chart for two weeks and peak at #29 becoming RBD's worst single performance on the chart.[3]
[edit] Charts
Chart (2007) |
Peak
position |
México Top 100 Singles Chart |
10[4] |
U.S. Billboard Hot Latin Songs |
30[5] |
Romanian Airplay Chart |
2[6] |
U.S. Billboard Latin Pop Airplay |
8[7] |
Los 40 Principales México |
5[8] |
Chilean Singles Chart |
57[9] |
Iberoamérica Top 100 |
32[10] |
Honduras Chart |
2[11] |
Peruvian Singles Chart |
31[12] |
Ecuador Singles Chart |
1[13] |
Costa Rica Singles Chart |
5[14] |
Latin America Top 40 |
29[15] |
Panama Singles Chart |
1[16] |
[edit] References