Juntos Otra Vez (Juan Gabriel and Rocío Dúrcal album)

Juntos Otra Vez
Studio album by Juan Gabriel and Rocío Dúrcal
Released April 29, 1997
Genre Pop Latino, Mariachi
Label RCA
Producer Juan Gabriel, Enrique Okamura
Juan Gabriel chronology
Del Otro Lado
(1996)
Juntos Otra Vez
(1997)
Celebracion de los 25 Años de Juan Gabriel en Bellas Artes
(1998)
Rocío Dúrcal chronology
Hay Amores y Amores
(1995)
Juntos Otra Vez
(1997)
Para Toda la Vida
(1999)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [1]
This table needs to be expanded using prose. See the guideline for more information.

Juntos Otra Vez ("Together Again") is the title of a studio album released by Mexican singer-songwriter Juan Gabriel and Spanish performer Rocío Dúrcal on April 29, 1997. This album became their first number-one set on the Billboard Top Latin Albums. The album was awarded "Regional Mexican Album of the Year" at the 1998 Premio Lo Nuestro Award.[2]

Contents

Tracklisting

All tracks written and composed by Juan Gabriel.[3]

Disc one

No. Title Performer Length
1. "El Principio"   Juan Gabriel 6:04
2. "Juntos"   Juan Gabriel and Rocío Dúrcal (Duet) 4:58
3. "El Verdadero Amor"   Juan Gabriel 2:56
4. "Te He Escrito Otra Canción"   Duet 3:30
5. "Nena Que Pena"   Juan Gabriel 3:51
6. "La Incertidumbre"   Duet 3:19
7. "Que Rechula Es Katy"   Juan Gabriel 3:53
8. "Dos Favores"   Duet 2:55
9. "Donde Hay Celos"   Juan Gabriel 2:07
10. "Que Bonito es Santa Fe"   Juan Gabriel 5:16

Disc two

No. Title Performer Length
1. "El México de Rocío"   Rocío Dúrcal 4:32
2. "El Destino"   Duet 4:43
3. "Me Refugié en Tu Juventud"   Rocío Dúrcal 5:50
4. "¿Sabes Por Qué?"   Duet 3:45
5. "Así Son los Hombres"   Rocío Dúrcal 3:11
6. "Santo Niñito"   Duet 4:14
7. "No Me Digas"   Rocío Dúrcal 3:34
8. "La Gitana"   Duet 3:36
9. "Te Sigo Amando"   Rocío Dúrcal 2:44
10. "El Final (Adiós Amor, Te Vas)"   Instrumental 3:32

Chart performance

Chart (1996) Peak
position
US Billboard Top Latin Albums[4] 1
US Billboard Latin Pop Albums[4] 1
US Billboard Regional Mexican Albums[4] 1
US Billboard 200[4] 152

Sales and certifications

Region Certification Sales/shipments
Mexico (AMPROFON)[5]
Video
Gold 10,000^
United States (RIAA)[6] 2× Platinum (Latin) 200,000^

^shipments figures based on certification alone

References

Proccession and succession

Preceded by
Llévame Contigo by Olga Tañón
U.S. Billboard Top Latin Albums number-one album
May 24, 1997
June 28, 1997
Succeeded by
Jefe de Jefes by Los Tigres del Norte