The Underdog/El Subestimado EXPLICIT LYRICS Tego Calderón

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CD

  • Release Date: 08/29/2006
  • Sales Rank: 46,382
  • Label: ATLANTIC / WEA
  • UPC: 075679412126
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CD$12.29
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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The Underdog/El Subestimado

1LISTEN¿Cómo Me Llamo Yo? 2:25
2LISTENLos Maté 2:53
3LISTENMardi Gras 3:41
4LISTENSlo Mo' 3:37
5LISTENPon La Cara 2:55
6LISTENPayaso (Interlude) 1:26
7LISTENPayaso / Voltio 4:35
8LISTENComprenderás 2:39
9LISTENLlora, Llora 3:29
10LISTENChillin' 3:15
11LISTENVeo, Veo 3:56
12LISTENOh Dios 3:54
13LISTENExtremidades 3:06
14LISTENSon Dos Alas (Interlude) 0:33
15LISTENChango Blanco 5:11
16LISTENA Mi Papá 3:24
17LISTENCuando Baila Reggaetón 3:04
18LISTENBureo, Bureo 2:44
19LISTENPor Qué (Interlude) 1:17
20LISTENLlévatelo Todo 2:24
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

OK, you don't get reggaetón. Maybe you're an old-school Latin music fan. What improvement could this hip-hop truncated music -- all electronic beats and call-and-response choruses -- make on the vast, expressive field of rumba, son, cumbia, merengue, salsa, and Latin jazz? Well titled indeed is Tego Calderón's third release, his first on WEA's domestic label, The Underdog -- because he's got something to prove, not only as an artist but as the most revered exponent of his genre. Calderón delivers, too. Designed as a tour of Afro-Latin music, El Subestimado tackles reggaetón, straight-up hip-hop, rumba, plena, and salsa with confidence. Calderón's thick Puerto Rican Spanish lyrics are rife with slang both contemporary and cockily antiquated, and as the bilingual liner notes indicate, they're deeper than the average "fill up my gas tank" reggaetón. Like his hero, the salsa singer Ismael Rivera, Calderón takes seriously the role of the sonero to tell the story of his people: -- not just the bling-flinging celebs but the local heroes and villains, the everyday strugglers, winners and losers both. The second half of this very long disc is especially exhilarating in this regard; a true rumbero, Calderón could (and maybe should) do an entire album of bomba and plena instead of the two tracks here (his salsa is credible, too, if a notch above perfunctory). And "Bad Man," featuring Calderón sparring with dancehall king Buju Banton, is a wise nod to the other ingredient in the reggaetón phenomenon. Speaking of guest stars, Calderón hosts a battery of veteran percussionists, including Luisito Quintero and Richie Flores, and voices, especially Oscar D'Leon, Ray De La Paz, and Cano Estremera, alongside the hip-hop talents of Salaam Remi and reggaetón stars Yandel and Voltio, positioning himself as a conduit between Latin music past and future. On Subestimado, Tego Calderón doesn't just take it to the bridge, he is the bridge. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Underdog/El Subestimadoby Anonymous

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November 17, 2006: This is a great album. I like most of the tracks. Including the interludes! Keep up the great work Tego!!