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Peligro de Extinción

"Peligro De Extinción" (English: Danger Of Extinction) is a Latin pop song by Puerto Rican reggaetón recording artist Ivy Queen, from her eighth studio album, Musa (2012). It was composed by Queen, Francisco Saldaña, and Víctor Delgado, produced by Noriega alongside the help of Predikador and released as the lead single off the album on March 24, 2012. The recording gained mainly positive to mixed reviews from critics, many praising the use of Edison Rey's accordion in the song. Lyrically, the song talks about how she doesn't want to be in danger of extinction, and that if there are no Romeos to sing to Juliets that the Juliets will take the role of the Romeos.

"Peligro De Extinción"
Single by Ivy Queen
from the album Musa
ReleasedMarch 24, 2012 (Radio)
June 19, 2012 (Digital)
Recorded2011–2012
GenreLatin pop, reggaetón, vallenato, cumbia
Length3:22
LabelSiente Music
Songwriter(s)Martha Pesante, Francisco Saldaña
Víctor Delgado
Producer(s)Noriega, Predikador
Ivy Queen singles chronology
"Amor Puro"
(2010)
"Peligro De Extinción"
(2012)
"Vamos A Celebrar"
(2012)

The song is a mixture of reggaetón, cumbia, and vallenato to create a new type of Latin pop sound. It reached number eighteen on the Billboard Latin Rhythm Airplay chart and number twenty-one on the Billboard Latin Rhythm Digital Songs chart. The song also managed a week on the Billboard Tropical Songs chart, at number eighty-four. The song's accompanying music video was directed by Marlon Peña and filmed in Miami, Florida on August 18, 2012. It was released on September 28, 2012. Queen performed the song at the 2012 Los Angeles LGBT pride parade. The song was included at number thirty-eight on Tr3s' Top 100 of 2012.

Background edit

After the success of her 2007 effort Sentimiento, which would be certified Platinum by the United States Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA),[1] a substantial live album was distributed by Machete in 2008.[2][3] This would lead up to Queen signing with the label in April 2010 as the label celebrated its fifth anniversary.[4]

The record signing, described as a 360 deal, includes profit sharing in tours, sponsorships and merchandising.[4] Ivy Queen was previously signed to a distribution deal with Univision Records, which in turn was acquired by Machete's parent company Universal Music Latin Entertainment in 2008.[4] President of Universal Music Latino and Machete, Walter Kolm, commented in a press release "It's a privilege to have Ivy Queen a part of our artistic roster. Ivy is an extraordinary woman with incomparable talent, and she's number one in her genre. We're happy to be able to work with her on her new album as well as future projects".[4] "I'm very proud to be a part of Machete Music. They are a young, vibrant company that has created a name for itself in Latin music in the United States and the world. They are a strong and important company that has been recognized for nurturing their artists’ creative talents," said Ivy Queen, regarding the partnership.[4] However even with all this, it was reported that Queen had signed with Siente Music in early 2012.

Writing and composition edit

Ivy Queen told Efe that the composition process started while she was heartbroken at home.[5] Her emotions then burst out in the recording studio.[5] She wrote 26 songs for Drama Queen in which only 16 appear, the lasting ten are used for Musa.[5] She explained that "The expectations I have with this album are quite realistic and can not be other than success and this is due to something that I did not think was possible without technology and the Internet".[6] She says the two years away from the media has helped her, not just emotionally but mentally as well.[6] "I like it, I think it is the best way to separate Ivelisse and Ivy Queen". She indicated that the album is "very mature and complete," because even though "her style is urban and the most predominant themes of reggaeton it also features fusions of rhythms and instruments that make their own style."[6] "I did not want to lock in to the reggaeton genre or singing just one genre. I had to address more than just one 'target' or a musical style as such. I love music in general and this, when the album was born of my loins; I let the muse flow and there came my ten issues."[6] "Peligro De Extinción" was composed by Queen herself with the help of Víctor Delgado and one half of the Dominican reggaetón production duo Luny Tunes, Francisco Saldaña, known as Luny. The song blends reggaetón with the sounds of cumbia and vallenato.[7] The song is composed in major key tonality and features simple harmonic progressions, an acoustic guitar, accordion (or bandoneon) playing, prominent percussion and romantic lyrics according to the Music Genome Project.[8]

Release and chart performance edit

The song was released to Puerto Rico radio stations on March 24, 2012, and premiered that same day on La Nueva 94.FM during the radio show "El Coyote The Show".[9] It was released digitally on June 19, 2012 in the United States and on June 26, 2012 in Spain and Germany. On the Billboard Latin Rhythm Airplay chart, the song debuted at number twenty-one for the week of June 26, 2012. It peaked at number eighteen spending a total of sixteen weeks on the chart.[10] On the Billboard Latin Rhythm Digital Songs chart, the song debuted and peaked at number twenty-one for the issue date of July 7, 2012, becoming Queen's third single on that chart after "La Vida Es Así" and "Acércate" reached number two and number sixteen respectively.[11] On the issue date of November 24, 2012, the song debuted and peaked at number eighty-four on the Billboard Tropical Songs chart.[12]

Critical reception edit

 
"Peligro De Extinción" has been compared to Michel Teló's smash hit "Ai Se Eu Te Pego!" saying that the use of the accordion was similar to that of "Ai Se Eu Te Pego".

The single garnered mostly positive to mixed reviews. On the review for the album, Rachel Devitt of Rhapsody commented, "See booming single "Peligro de Extinción," which seems pretty unlikely, especially when the Queen starts talking about Juliets taking over for Romeos if the boys can't handle it."[13] Judy Cantor-Navas of Google Play commented that "Peligro de Extinción" features the kind of rootsy accordion found on Michel Teló's worldwide sensation "Ai Se Eu Te Pego."[14] According to David Jeffries of Allmusic, the "more polished "Peligro de Extinción" is worth inclusion on her next best-of album.[15] Thom Jurek, also writing for Allmusic, selected the song as a standout track on the compilation album Ultrasónico 2013 (2013).[16] Jonathan Bogart gave the song a 9 out of 10 stars and said "It took me a while to warm up to “Peligro de Extinción.” With that title, I'd been expecting a reggaetón rager excoriating the systems of oppression and erasure that threaten Puerto Ricans and Latinos everywhere. But what's in danger of extinction is “true romance,” “like in the days of old.” So rather than wait around for a Romeo to find her on her balcony, she's taking the reins and chasing him down herself — which is itself quietly revolutionary, that even in the middle of an old-fashioned love song lamenting the death of old-fashioned love, she's demanding agency. And Edison Rey's sweet accordion skillfully threads between the twin romanticisms at the far ends of Latin America, tango and conjunto norteño. It's perhaps the prettiest single Ivy Queen has ever released (or at least tied with “Dime”), largely letting the reggaetón beat alone in favor of lighter, more swaying cumbia and vallenato. And so what once passed in one ear and out the other when it first leaked back in May now moves me to tears. Of laughter, when she gives the guy that look in the video, and of sentiment, when the harmonies come lushly in."[17] Anthony Easton gave the song a 7 out of 10 stars and said "The accordion is just gorgeous, plus I have always loved Ivy Queen’s voice. In fact, all of this slowed down and stretched out, with less gymnastics required, we have more time to work through what the voice means, and how it sounds — that privilege attached to the accordion just makes it better."[18] Edward Okulicz gave the single a 7 out of 10 stars and said "Well, you’ve got to love the sound of an accordion in its natural environment; Ivy Queen sings with a real, impressive sense of authority, nearly as regal as the name would imply. That authority and presence is undermined slightly by the beat which drown them out to some extent, though if it were quieter it wouldn’t encourage the hips so much. The trade-off wouldn’t have been worth it."[19] Will Adams gave the song a 4 out of 10 stars and commented that his first and only exposure to Ivy Queen was through a funny video. He would go on to say he was expecting something fun. "The music is bright enough to inspire early-hours dancing, but the unfamiliar structure and minor key leaning take away some of the fun."[20] Iain Forrester gave the song a 7 out of 10 stars and said that the opening line “That was then. This is now” was an excellent portentous opening. He would go on to say that the song doesn't end up sounding like the definitive statement that it promises, hanging back too far from embracing dance banger status. The gorgeous squeaky flutter of the accordion is a strong compensation.[21] Josh Langhoff gave the song a 7 out of 10 stars and said "To say a reggaetón song inhabits multiple musical worlds at once is to say precisely nothing, since “blending”, “taking influences” and “Spanish reggae” have always been part of the point. So instead I'll say, man, that accordion solo halfway through sounds like a guitar solo — a single line, triplets, repetitive melodic figures stretching for the notes with maximum yearn impact. Tasty! The notes yearn because of how they fit the chord progression, imported from a million norteamericano pop songs; on top of it, Ms. Queen and her producers build an elaborate vocal structure of multitracked harmonies and shoutouts, even evoking Nelly-style rapstimme at the beginning. Every element seems chosen to sound cool, which is a nice thing about inhabiting multiple musical worlds — you can avoid the tensions you'd find in a Junot Diaz book or, you know, real life."[22]

Music video edit

 
Ivy Queen and her "Romeo" in the music video for "Peligro De Extinción".

The music video for "Peligro De Extinción" was filmed in Miami, Florida on August 18, 2012. It was directed by Marlon Pena. It was released on September 28, 2012.[23] The video has over three million views on the video-sharing website YouTube.[24]

Track listing edit

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Peligro De Extinción"Martha Pesante, Francisco Saldaña, Víctor DelgadoNoriega, Predikador3:22
Total length:3:22

Charts edit

Release history edit

List of release dates, showing regions, formats, labels and references
Region Date Format Label
Puerto Rico[29] March 24, 2012 Radio premiere Siente Music, Venevision
United States[30] June 19, 2012 Digital download, streaming
Spain[31] June 26, 2012 Universal Music Spain
Germany[32] Universal Music International

References edit

  1. ^ "American album certifications – Ivy Queen – Sentimiento". Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved 2011-04-15.
  2. ^ "Contentos los reggaetoneros, Ivy Queen y R.K.M & Ken-Y". El Nuevo Dia (in Spanish). 2009-02-17. Retrieved 2013-03-05.
  3. ^ Ben-Yehuda, Ayala (2008-07-12). "Urban Jungle: Reggaetón Stars Expand Reach On New Albums". Billboard. Vol. 120, no. 28. p. 21. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved 2013-05-04.
  4. ^ a b c d e Carla Lopez (2010-04-07). "Ivy Queen Signs With Machete Music". PR Web. Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC. Retrieved 2013-01-10.
  5. ^ a b c Jorge J. Muñiz Ortiz (2010-04-09). "Ivy Queen desahoga todos sus sentimientos en su nuevo disco "Drama Queen"". Terra Networks (in Spanish). Telefónica. Retrieved 2012-11-03.
  6. ^ a b c d "Ivy Queen Comes Back With "Musa"". Reggaetonline. 2010-08-06. Retrieved 2012-06-15.
  7. ^ "Ivy Queen regresó con cumbia y vallenato en su disco Musa". El Colombiano. El Colombiano S.A. & CIA. S.C.A. 2012-08-16. Retrieved 2013-03-03.
  8. ^ "Peligro De Extincion - Ivy Queen on Pandora Internet Radio". Pandora. Pandora Media, Inc. Retrieved 2013-03-03.
  9. ^ "Ivy Queen estrena nuevo sencillo". El Nuevo Día. Apex Technologies, Inc. 2012-03-27. Retrieved 2013-05-26.
  10. ^ "Ivy Queen - Chart History: Latin Rhythm Airplay". Billboard. Retrieved 2013-03-02.
  11. ^ "Ivy Queen - Chart History: Latin Rhythm Digital Songs". Billboard. Retrieved 2013-03-02.
  12. ^ "Ivy Queen - Chart History: Tropical Songs". Billboard. Retrieved 2013-03-01.
  13. ^ Devitt, Rachel (2012-08-21). "Musa: Ivy Queen". Retrieved 2012-10-07.
  14. ^ Cantor-Navas, Judy (2012-08-21). "Musa: Ivy Queen - Album Introduction". Retrieved 2012-10-22.
  15. ^ "Musa - Ivy Queen: Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards: Allmusic". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 2013-07-24.
  16. ^ "Ultrasónico 2013 - Various Artist: Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards: Allmusic". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 2013-07-24.
  17. ^ Bogart, Jonathan (2012-10-05). "Ivy Queen – Peligro de Extinción". Retrieved 2012-10-20.
  18. ^ Easton, Anthony (2012-10-05). "Ivy Queen – Peligro de Extinción". Retrieved 2012-10-20.
  19. ^ Okulicz, Edward (2012-10-05). "Ivy Queen – Peligro de Extinción". Retrieved 2012-10-20.
  20. ^ Adams, Will (2012-10-05). "Ivy Queen – Peligro de Extinción". Retrieved 2012-10-20.
  21. ^ Forrester, Iain (2012-10-05). "Ivy Queen – Peligro de Extinción". Retrieved 2012-10-20.
  22. ^ Langoff, Josh (2012-10-05). "Ivy Queen – Peligro de Extinción". Retrieved 2012-10-20.
  23. ^ "Ivy Queen presenta su video "Peligro de extincion"". Apex Technologies Inc. 2010-09-28. Retrieved 2012-10-01.
  24. ^ "Ivy Queen - Peligro De Extincion - YouTube". YouTube. 2012-09-28. Retrieved 2013-06-22.
  25. ^ "Latin Rhythm Airplay 2012-10-20". Billboard. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  26. ^ "Latin Rhythm Digital Songs 2012-07-07". Billboard. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  27. ^ "Tropical/Salsa 2012-11-24". Billboard. Retrieved 2012-11-27.
  28. ^ "Latin Rhythm Songs: Year-end 2012 - Chart Archive". Billboard. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  29. ^ "Ivy Queen tiene nuevo disco Musa". Las Noticias Mexico. EspectaculosMX. 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2013-11-11.
  30. ^ "Ivy Queen: Peligro De Extinción - Universal Music Latin Entertainment". Universal Music Latin Entertainment. Universal Music Group. Retrieved 2012-10-27.
  31. ^ "Peligro De Extinción: Ivy Queen: Amazon.es: Tienda MP3". Amazon.com. Amazon.com, Inc. Retrieved 2012-10-27.
  32. ^ "Peligro De Extinción: Ivy Queen: Amazon.de: MP3-Downloads". Amazon.com. Amazon.com, Inc. Retrieved 2012-10-20.

peligro, extinción, peligro, extinción, english, danger, extinction, latin, song, puerto, rican, reggaetón, recording, artist, queen, from, eighth, studio, album, musa, 2012, composed, queen, francisco, saldaña, víctor, delgado, produced, noriega, alongside, h. Peligro De Extincion English Danger Of Extinction is a Latin pop song by Puerto Rican reggaeton recording artist Ivy Queen from her eighth studio album Musa 2012 It was composed by Queen Francisco Saldana and Victor Delgado produced by Noriega alongside the help of Predikador and released as the lead single off the album on March 24 2012 The recording gained mainly positive to mixed reviews from critics many praising the use of Edison Rey s accordion in the song Lyrically the song talks about how she doesn t want to be in danger of extinction and that if there are no Romeos to sing to Juliets that the Juliets will take the role of the Romeos Peligro De Extincion Single by Ivy Queenfrom the album MusaReleasedMarch 24 2012 Radio June 19 2012 Digital Recorded2011 2012GenreLatin pop reggaeton vallenato cumbiaLength3 22LabelSiente MusicSongwriter s Martha Pesante Francisco Saldana Victor DelgadoProducer s Noriega PredikadorIvy Queen singles chronology Amor Puro 2010 Peligro De Extincion 2012 Vamos A Celebrar 2012 The song is a mixture of reggaeton cumbia and vallenato to create a new type of Latin pop sound It reached number eighteen on the Billboard Latin Rhythm Airplay chart and number twenty one on the Billboard Latin Rhythm Digital Songs chart The song also managed a week on the Billboard Tropical Songs chart at number eighty four The song s accompanying music video was directed by Marlon Pena and filmed in Miami Florida on August 18 2012 It was released on September 28 2012 Queen performed the song at the 2012 Los Angeles LGBT pride parade The song was included at number thirty eight on Tr3s Top 100 of 2012 Contents 1 Background 2 Writing and composition 3 Release and chart performance 4 Critical reception 5 Music video 6 Track listing 7 Charts 7 1 Weekly charts 7 2 Yearly charts 8 Release history 9 ReferencesBackground editAfter the success of her 2007 effort Sentimiento which would be certified Platinum by the United States Recording Industry Association of America RIAA 1 a substantial live album was distributed by Machete in 2008 2 3 This would lead up to Queen signing with the label in April 2010 as the label celebrated its fifth anniversary 4 The record signing described as a 360 deal includes profit sharing in tours sponsorships and merchandising 4 Ivy Queen was previously signed to a distribution deal with Univision Records which in turn was acquired by Machete s parent company Universal Music Latin Entertainment in 2008 4 President of Universal Music Latino and Machete Walter Kolm commented in a press release It s a privilege to have Ivy Queen a part of our artistic roster Ivy is an extraordinary woman with incomparable talent and she s number one in her genre We re happy to be able to work with her on her new album as well as future projects 4 I m very proud to be a part of Machete Music They are a young vibrant company that has created a name for itself in Latin music in the United States and the world They are a strong and important company that has been recognized for nurturing their artists creative talents said Ivy Queen regarding the partnership 4 However even with all this it was reported that Queen had signed with Siente Music in early 2012 Writing and composition edit nbsp Ivy Queen Peligro De Extincion 2012 source source An 18 second sample of Peligro De Extincion featuring Edision Rey s accordion contributing to a reggaeton and cumbia type sound infused with vallenato Problems playing this file See media help Ivy Queen told Efe that the composition process started while she was heartbroken at home 5 Her emotions then burst out in the recording studio 5 She wrote 26 songs for Drama Queen in which only 16 appear the lasting ten are used for Musa 5 She explained that The expectations I have with this album are quite realistic and can not be other than success and this is due to something that I did not think was possible without technology and the Internet 6 She says the two years away from the media has helped her not just emotionally but mentally as well 6 I like it I think it is the best way to separate Ivelisse and Ivy Queen She indicated that the album is very mature and complete because even though her style is urban and the most predominant themes of reggaeton it also features fusions of rhythms and instruments that make their own style 6 I did not want to lock in to the reggaeton genre or singing just one genre I had to address more than just one target or a musical style as such I love music in general and this when the album was born of my loins I let the muse flow and there came my ten issues 6 Peligro De Extincion was composed by Queen herself with the help of Victor Delgado and one half of the Dominican reggaeton production duo Luny Tunes Francisco Saldana known as Luny The song blends reggaeton with the sounds of cumbia and vallenato 7 The song is composed in major key tonality and features simple harmonic progressions an acoustic guitar accordion or bandoneon playing prominent percussion and romantic lyrics according to the Music Genome Project 8 Release and chart performance editThe song was released to Puerto Rico radio stations on March 24 2012 and premiered that same day on La Nueva 94 FM during the radio show El Coyote The Show 9 It was released digitally on June 19 2012 in the United States and on June 26 2012 in Spain and Germany On the Billboard Latin Rhythm Airplay chart the song debuted at number twenty one for the week of June 26 2012 It peaked at number eighteen spending a total of sixteen weeks on the chart 10 On the Billboard Latin Rhythm Digital Songs chart the song debuted and peaked at number twenty one for the issue date of July 7 2012 becoming Queen s third single on that chart after La Vida Es Asi and Acercate reached number two and number sixteen respectively 11 On the issue date of November 24 2012 the song debuted and peaked at number eighty four on the Billboard Tropical Songs chart 12 Critical reception edit nbsp Peligro De Extincion has been compared to Michel Telo s smash hit Ai Se Eu Te Pego saying that the use of the accordion was similar to that of Ai Se Eu Te Pego The single garnered mostly positive to mixed reviews On the review for the album Rachel Devitt of Rhapsody commented See booming single Peligro de Extincion which seems pretty unlikely especially when the Queen starts talking about Juliets taking over for Romeos if the boys can t handle it 13 Judy Cantor Navas of Google Play commented that Peligro de Extincion features the kind of rootsy accordion found on Michel Telo s worldwide sensation Ai Se Eu Te Pego 14 According to David Jeffries of Allmusic the more polished Peligro de Extincion is worth inclusion on her next best of album 15 Thom Jurek also writing for Allmusic selected the song as a standout track on the compilation album Ultrasonico 2013 2013 16 Jonathan Bogart gave the song a 9 out of 10 stars and said It took me a while to warm up to Peligro de Extincion With that title I d been expecting a reggaeton rager excoriating the systems of oppression and erasure that threaten Puerto Ricans and Latinos everywhere But what s in danger of extinction is true romance like in the days of old So rather than wait around for a Romeo to find her on her balcony she s taking the reins and chasing him down herself which is itself quietly revolutionary that even in the middle of an old fashioned love song lamenting the death of old fashioned love she s demanding agency And Edison Rey s sweet accordion skillfully threads between the twin romanticisms at the far ends of Latin America tango and conjunto norteno It s perhaps the prettiest single Ivy Queen has ever released or at least tied with Dime largely letting the reggaeton beat alone in favor of lighter more swaying cumbia and vallenato And so what once passed in one ear and out the other when it first leaked back in May now moves me to tears Of laughter when she gives the guy that look in the video and of sentiment when the harmonies come lushly in 17 Anthony Easton gave the song a 7 out of 10 stars and said The accordion is just gorgeous plus I have always loved Ivy Queen s voice In fact all of this slowed down and stretched out with less gymnastics required we have more time to work through what the voice means and how it sounds that privilege attached to the accordion just makes it better 18 Edward Okulicz gave the single a 7 out of 10 stars and said Well you ve got to love the sound of an accordion in its natural environment Ivy Queen sings with a real impressive sense of authority nearly as regal as the name would imply That authority and presence is undermined slightly by the beat which drown them out to some extent though if it were quieter it wouldn t encourage the hips so much The trade off wouldn t have been worth it 19 Will Adams gave the song a 4 out of 10 stars and commented that his first and only exposure to Ivy Queen was through a funny video He would go on to say he was expecting something fun The music is bright enough to inspire early hours dancing but the unfamiliar structure and minor key leaning take away some of the fun 20 Iain Forrester gave the song a 7 out of 10 stars and said that the opening line That was then This is now was an excellent portentous opening He would go on to say that the song doesn t end up sounding like the definitive statement that it promises hanging back too far from embracing dance banger status The gorgeous squeaky flutter of the accordion is a strong compensation 21 Josh Langhoff gave the song a 7 out of 10 stars and said To say a reggaeton song inhabits multiple musical worlds at once is to say precisely nothing since blending taking influences and Spanish reggae have always been part of the point So instead I ll say man that accordion solo halfway through sounds like a guitar solo a single line triplets repetitive melodic figures stretching for the notes with maximum yearn impact Tasty The notes yearn because of how they fit the chord progression imported from a million norteamericano pop songs on top of it Ms Queen and her producers build an elaborate vocal structure of multitracked harmonies and shoutouts even evoking Nelly style rapstimme at the beginning Every element seems chosen to sound cool which is a nice thing about inhabiting multiple musical worlds you can avoid the tensions you d find in a Junot Diaz book or you know real life 22 Music video edit nbsp Ivy Queen and her Romeo in the music video for Peligro De Extincion The music video for Peligro De Extincion was filmed in Miami Florida on August 18 2012 It was directed by Marlon Pena It was released on September 28 2012 23 The video has over three million views on the video sharing website YouTube 24 Track listing editNo TitleWriter s Producer s Length1 Peligro De Extincion Martha Pesante Francisco Saldana Victor DelgadoNoriega Predikador3 22Total length 3 22Charts editWeekly charts edit Chart 2012 PositionUS Latin Rhythm Airplay Billboard 25 18US Latin Rhythm Digital Songs Billboard 26 17US Tropical Songs Billboard 27 84 Yearly charts edit Chart 2012 PositionUS Latin Rhythm Airplay Billboard 28 47Release history editList of release dates showing regions formats labels and references Region Date Format LabelPuerto Rico 29 March 24 2012 Radio premiere Siente Music VenevisionUnited States 30 June 19 2012 Digital download streamingSpain 31 June 26 2012 Universal Music SpainGermany 32 Universal Music InternationalReferences edit American album certifications Ivy Queen Sentimiento Recording Industry Association of America Retrieved 2011 04 15 Contentos los reggaetoneros Ivy Queen y R K M amp Ken Y El Nuevo Dia in Spanish 2009 02 17 Retrieved 2013 03 05 Ben Yehuda Ayala 2008 07 12 Urban Jungle Reggaeton Stars Expand Reach On New Albums Billboard Vol 120 no 28 p 21 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved 2013 05 04 a b c d e Carla Lopez 2010 04 07 Ivy Queen Signs With Machete Music PR Web Vocus PRW Holdings LLC Retrieved 2013 01 10 a b c Jorge J Muniz Ortiz 2010 04 09 Ivy Queen desahoga todos sus sentimientos en su nuevo disco Drama Queen Terra Networks in Spanish Telefonica Retrieved 2012 11 03 a b c d Ivy Queen Comes Back With Musa Reggaetonline 2010 08 06 Retrieved 2012 06 15 Ivy Queen regreso con cumbia y vallenato en su disco Musa El Colombiano El Colombiano S A amp CIA S C A 2012 08 16 Retrieved 2013 03 03 Peligro De Extincion Ivy Queen on Pandora Internet Radio Pandora Pandora Media Inc Retrieved 2013 03 03 Ivy Queen estrena nuevo sencillo El Nuevo Dia Apex Technologies Inc 2012 03 27 Retrieved 2013 05 26 Ivy Queen Chart History Latin Rhythm Airplay Billboard Retrieved 2013 03 02 Ivy Queen Chart History Latin Rhythm Digital Songs Billboard Retrieved 2013 03 02 Ivy Queen Chart History Tropical Songs Billboard Retrieved 2013 03 01 Devitt Rachel 2012 08 21 Musa Ivy Queen Retrieved 2012 10 07 Cantor Navas Judy 2012 08 21 Musa Ivy Queen Album Introduction Retrieved 2012 10 22 Musa Ivy Queen Songs Reviews Credits Awards Allmusic Allmusic Rovi Corporation Retrieved 2013 07 24 Ultrasonico 2013 Various Artist Songs Reviews Credits Awards Allmusic Allmusic Rovi Corporation Retrieved 2013 07 24 Bogart Jonathan 2012 10 05 Ivy Queen Peligro de Extincion Retrieved 2012 10 20 Easton Anthony 2012 10 05 Ivy Queen Peligro de Extincion Retrieved 2012 10 20 Okulicz Edward 2012 10 05 Ivy Queen Peligro de Extincion Retrieved 2012 10 20 Adams Will 2012 10 05 Ivy Queen Peligro de Extincion Retrieved 2012 10 20 Forrester Iain 2012 10 05 Ivy Queen Peligro de Extincion Retrieved 2012 10 20 Langoff Josh 2012 10 05 Ivy Queen Peligro de Extincion Retrieved 2012 10 20 Ivy Queen presenta su video Peligro de extincion Apex Technologies Inc 2010 09 28 Retrieved 2012 10 01 Ivy Queen Peligro De Extincion YouTube YouTube 2012 09 28 Retrieved 2013 06 22 Latin Rhythm Airplay 2012 10 20 Billboard Retrieved 2012 10 18 Latin Rhythm Digital Songs 2012 07 07 Billboard Retrieved 2012 10 18 Tropical Salsa 2012 11 24 Billboard Retrieved 2012 11 27 Latin Rhythm Songs Year end 2012 Chart Archive Billboard Retrieved 2012 10 18 Ivy Queen tiene nuevo disco Musa Las Noticias Mexico EspectaculosMX 2012 03 24 Retrieved 2013 11 11 Ivy Queen Peligro De Extincion Universal Music Latin Entertainment Universal Music Latin Entertainment Universal Music Group Retrieved 2012 10 27 Peligro De Extincion Ivy Queen Amazon es Tienda MP3 Amazon com Amazon com Inc Retrieved 2012 10 27 Peligro De Extincion Ivy Queen Amazon de MP3 Downloads Amazon com Amazon com Inc Retrieved 2012 10 20 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peligro de Extincion amp oldid 1212946031, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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