Me Muero

"Me Muero"
Single by La 5ª Estación
from the album El Mundo Se Equivoca
Released 2006
Recorded 2006
Genre Latin Pop
Length 3:09
Label Sony International
Writer(s) Armando Avila
Natalia Jimenez
Producer(s) Armando Avila
La 5ª Estación singles chronology
"Tu Peor Error"
(2006)
"Me Muero"
(2007)
"Sueños Rotos"
(2007)

"Me Muero" (Spanish for "I Die" or "I Am Dying") is La 5ª Estación's second single release from their third studio album, El mundo se equivoca.

Song information

"Me Muero" was officially released to American and Latin American radio towards the end of 2006. In Mexico, the song topped the official singles chart for eleven weeks in a row, eventually being succeeded by Julieta Venegas' "Eres para mí". In the United States, the song peaked at number two on the Latin Pop Airplay chart and number ten on the Hot Latin Tracks chart. In Spain, the song peaked at number two. According to Promusicae, "Me Muero" has been certified 6× Platinum in Spain for sales of over 120,000 units, being one of the big hits from 2007 in that country.[1]

The song was recently re-done in a "Banda" style by Objetivo Fama finalist and Mexican singer "Azucena del Campo", and has been released to much acclaim.

Music video

The music video for "Me Muero" begins with what appears as a fan cutting and pasting pictures of a wrestling star. The collage album is then given to the wrestler and he reflects on it while he faces a match. La 5ª Estación is shown singing from the ring in the arena. The supposed fan then shows up to the match as sign of support. Finally a scene is shown where the two kiss and it is revealed that the fan was actually the wrestler's wife. The main wrestler in the video is professional Mexican wrestler, Místico.

Charts

"Me Muero"

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Chart (2006) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot Latin Tracks 10
U.S. Billboard Latin Pop Airplay 2
Spanish Singles Chart [2] 2
Spanish Airplay Chart [3] 1
Preceded by
"Tu Recuerdo" by Ricky Martin
Mexican Top 100 number-one single
February 4, 2007 - April 15, 2007
Succeeded by
"Eres Para Mi" by Julieta Venegas

References