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Amarte Es Un Placer Tour

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1999–2000 concert tour by Luis Miguel

Amarte Es Un Placer Tour
Tour byLuis Miguel
Associated albumAmarte Es Un Placer
Start dateSeptember 9, 1999
End dateMay 6, 2000
Legs2
No. of shows
  • 59 in North America
  • 17 in Europe
  • 23 in South America
  • 99 total
Attendance1,500,000
Luis Miguel concert chronology

TheAmarte Es Un Placer Tour (English: Loving You Is a Pleasure Tour) was aconcert tour byLuis Miguel to promote his albumAmarte Es Un Placer. This tour had a length of 8 months and ran through Mexico, US, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Venezuela, Brazil and Spain between 1999 and 2000. It was the highest-grossing tour ever made by a Spanish-speaking artist, as well as the most extended.[1] The tour consisted of 99 concerts,[2] and was attended by approximately 1.5 million fans.[3] These two records have been broken by another tour of the same artist, theMexico En La Piel Tour.

History

[edit]

To promoteAmarte Es un Placer, Luis Miguel began his Amarte Es Un Placer Tour on 9 September 1999 inGijón, Spain.[4] In Madrid, he performed three sold-out shows,[5] and spent a month touring in Spain. His performances inMadrid,Barcelona,Sevilla,Tenerife, andMarbella were among the country's highest grossing shows of 1999.[6] Miguel then toured South America where he performed in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, and Venezuela.[7][8] In Argentina, he drew more than 50,000 attendees per show at his three concerts inBuenos Aires,[9] and more than 101,800 spectators attended his five shows in Chile, the largest audiences of the year for an artist.[10][11] The first leg of the tour ended on 11 December 1999 inMaracaibo, Venezuela.[12] A concert was planned for theSan Jose Arena in California on New Year's Eve, but was canceled because the gross income would not meet Miguel's requirements.[13]

Miguel commenced the second leg of his tour at theCentennial Garden in Bakersfield, California on 1 February 2000.[14][15] Two days later, he performed at theUniversal Amphitheatre inLos Angeles, California for five consecutive nights drawing more than 24,000 spectators. In the same month, he performed four shows atRadio City Music Hall in New York City and grossed $1.4 million.[16] He also appeared inMinneapolis on 12 February and inFairfax on 14 February.[17][18] Following his concerts at Radio City Music Hall, Miguel performed 21 consecutive shows at theNational Auditorium in Mexico City beginning on 24 February; beating the previous record of 20 set by Mexican groupTimbiriche, and set the record for most attendees with an overall count of 255,000 patrons, another record for the artist.[19]Miguel returned to touring in the United States on 24 March 2000, performed in several cities including Miami,[20] Chicago,[21] Atlantic City,[22] and Houston.[23] He later presented five shows inMonterrey, Mexico from 13 to 17 April 2000,[24][25] and after a few more performances in the US, ended the tour in San Diego on 6 May 2000.[26][27]  Miguel had the 23rdhighest-grossing tour in the country with more than $15.7 million earned from his 44 shows in the US.[28] The tour was recognized by theWilliam Morris Agency as the highest-grossing tour by aSpanish-speaking artist.[29]Miguel was accompanied by a 13-piece band during his tour which included horns, keyboards, guitars, and three female backup singers.[17][30] His hour-and-a-half show consisted mainly of pop songs and ballads fromAmarte Es un Placer and his earlier career, as well asmedleys ofboleros from theRomance-themed albums.[31] During his concerts in Monterrey, he was joined by Cutberto Pérez's band Mariachi 2000 and performed live covers ofMario De Jesús Báez "Y" andRubén Fuentes "La Bikina".[32] The shows included a large live-screen behind the stage and featured fireworks and confetti.[17]

Critical reception

[edit]

The Dallas Morning News writer Mario Tarradell found Miguel's show at theStarplex Pavilion in Dallas to be underwhelming. He panned Miguel's performance of the first bolero medley as "rushed" and "erratic" and observed that the artist "spat out the lyrics, swallowed a few of them, and displayed a childlike hyperactivity in the midst of lush ballads". Tarradell also remarked that Miguel displayed a bizarre behavior during the concert such as using high notes on power ballads (which Tarradell deemed as "totally unnecessary") and was confused by Miguel's decision to do anair guitar while "Bésame Mucho" was being played.[30]

Of Miguel's performances in Los Angeles,The Orange County Register editor Daniel Chang commented that he "delivered a classy show that was as much fun to watch as it was to hear". Chang noted that Miguel "emotes a contagious energy through dramatic facial expressions, fetal-position-like contortions and physical outbursts in time with the music" and complimented his dance moves and the visual sets.[33] Regarding his concert in Houston, Michael D. Clark of theHouston Chronicle said that Miguel "proved, once again, that it isn't necessary to change languages to reach U.S. audiences". He observed that Miguel seemed "determined to balance the upbeat with the overwrought" in contrast to his previous concerts, which were dominated by ballads. Clark was disappointed that the boleros were sung in medleys which did not allow any of them to stand out.[23]

Jon Bream commented in theStar Tribune that Miguel's presentation in Minneapolis was "one of the most ambitious concert spectacles ever presented at the theater" and that the singer had a "captivating presence", but added that Miguel's music was "not particularly distinctive". He likened Miguel's uptempo songs toEarth, Wind & Fire albeit without the "rhythmic and jazzy sophistication", considered his ballads to be "conservative pop, bathed in synthesized strings with Chicago-like horn filigree," and felt let down by Miguel's choice to perform his boleros in medleys.[17]

On 24 October 2000,WEA released theVivo live album and video from Miguel's concerts in Monterrey.[34] AllMusic editor Perry Seibert gave the video album two-out-of-five stars  and criticized its lack of subtitles, closed captions, and supplemental materials, but stated that it should not "dissuade fans of Latino music from checking out this entertaining DVD from Warner Bros".[35]

Broadcasts and recordings

[edit]
The full stadium.
Luis Miguel performed three sold-out shows atJosé Amalfitani Stadium gathering a total of 150,000 spectators.
Main article:Vivo (Luis Miguel album)

Was launched a CD and DVD, titledVivo, the CD was released on October 3, 2000, while the video album was released on October 24. It was filmed at theAuditorio Coca-Cola concert hall in Monterrey, Mexico, where Miguel performed from 13 to 17 April 2000, as part of the second leg of his tour.Vivo is the first Spanish-language live album to be released onNTSC,PAL, and DVD formats. The audio version was produced by Miguel whileDavid Mallet directed the video album. Miguel's renditions of "Y" and "La Bikina", which he specifically performed during the concert shows in Mexico where he was joined by Cutberto Pérez's band Mariachi 2000, made available as singles for the album.[36][37]

Miguel received several accolades, including aGrammy nomination forBest Latin Pop Album[38] and aLatin Grammy nomination forBest Male Pop Vocal Album.[39] Commercially, the album peaked at number two on the albums chart in Spain and on theBillboard Top Latin Albums chart in the United States.[40][41] It also topped the albums chart in Argentina and was certified double Platinum[42] and triple Platinum and Gold in Mexico.[43]

On the first leg of the tour, in ArgentinaCanal 13 aired a 90-minute special with the complete show of November 5, 1999 atJosé Amalfitani Stadium, with a 50,000 sold-out.[44] Also in Chile the November 20 show atEstadio Nacional was fully recorded, for a partial 60-minute transmission a few days later byUC13.[45]

Set list

[edit]
Leg 1 (September 9, 1999 – December 11, 1999)[46]
No.TitleOriginal albumLength
1."Intro"  
2."Quiero"Amarte Es Un Placer 
3."Tú, Solo Tú"Amarte Es Un Placer 
4."J.C. Calderón" (Entrégate /Tengo Todo Excepto a Ti /La Incondicional)20 Años,Busca Una Mujer 
5."Up-tempo Medley" (Un Hombre Busca Una Mujer / Cuestión De Piel / Oro De Ley)Busca Una Mujer,20 Años 
6."Romance" (No Me Platiques Más / No Sé Tú / La Puerta / La Barca /Inolvidable)Romance 
7."Suave"Aries 
8."Dame"Nada Es Igual 
9."Interlude [Armonica]"  
10."Dormir Contigo (only in selected dates in South America)"Amarte Es Un Placer 
11."Segundo Romance" (El Día Que Me Quieras / Solamente Una Vez / Somos Novios / Todo Y Nada / Nosotros)Segundo Romance 
12."O Tú o Ninguna"Amarte Es Un Placer 
13."Sol, Arena y Mar"Amarte Es Un Placer 
14."Romances" (Voy A Apagar La Luz / Contigo Aprendi /Por Debajo de la Mesa / El Reloj /Sabor a Mí / La Gloria Eres Tú / Bésame Mucho)Romances 
15."Cómo Es Posible Que a Mi Lado"Nada Es Igual 
16."Será Que No Me Amas"20 Años 
17."Te Propongo Esta Noche"Amarte Es Un Placer 
Leg 2 (February 1, 2000 – May 6, 2000)[47][48]
No.TitleOriginal albumLength
1."Intro"  
2."Quiero"Amarte Es Un Placer 
3."Tú, Solo Tú"Amarte Es Un Placer 
4."J.C. Calderón" (Entrégate / Tengo Todo Excepto A Ti / La Incondicional)20 Años,Busca Una Mujer 
5."Up-tempo Medley" (Un Hombre Busca Una Mujer / Cuestión De Piel / Oro De Ley)Busca Una Mujer,20 Años 
6."Romance" (No Me Platiques Más / No Sé Tú / La Puerta / La Barca / Inolvidable)Romance 
7."Suave"Aries 
8."Interlude [Armonica]"  
9."Segundo Romance" (El Día Que Me Quieras / Solamente Una Vez / Somos Novios / Todo Y Nada / Nosotros)Segundo Romance 
10."O Tú, O Ninguna"Amarte Es Un Placer 
11."Sol, Arena Y Mar"Amarte Es Un Placer 
12."Romances" (Voy A Apagar La Luz / Contigo Aprendi / Por Debajo De La Mesa / El Reloj / Sabor A Mi / La Gloria Eres Tú / Bésame Mucho)Romances 
13."Y (only in Mexico)"never released by the artist 
14."La Bikina (only in Mexico)"never released by the artist 
15."Cómo Es Posible Que A Mi Lado"Nada Es Igual 
16."Será Que No Me Amas"20 Años 
17."Te Propongo Esta Noche"Amarte Es Un Placer 

Tour dates

[edit]
List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, tickets sold, number of available tickets, and amount of gross revenue
DateCityCountryVenueAttendanceRevenue
Europe - Leg 1
September 9, 1999GijónSpainPalacio de Deportes de Gijón[4]N/aN/a
September 11, 1999PamplonaPlaza de Toros de Pamplona[49]
September 15, 1999MadridPlaza de Toros Las Ventas[50]44,641
September 16, 1999
September 17, 1999
September 20, 1999VigoAuditorio de CastrelosN/a
September 22, 1999ValladolidEstadio José Zorrilla
September 25, 1999MarbellaEstadio Municipal de Marbella12,000
September 26, 1999CartagenaEstadio CartagonovaN/a
October 1, 1999ValenciaPlaza de Toros de Valencia
October 2, 1999
October 5, 1999BarcelonaPalau Sant Jordi26,297
October 6, 1999
October 9, 1999[a]SevilleEstadio Olímpico de la Cartuja[52]20,150
October 11, 1999ZaragozaPabellón Príncipe FelipeN/a
October 12, 1999
October 16, 1999TenerifeRecinto Portuario16,000
South America
October 28, 1999São PauloBrazilCredicard HallN/aN/a
October 29, 1999
October 30, 1999
November 1, 1999Rio de JaneiroArena Metropolitan
November 2, 1999
November 5, 1999Buenos AiresArgentinaEstadio Vélez Sarsfield[53]
November 6, 1999
November 7, 1999
November 10, 1999RosarioEstadio Rosario Central[54]
November 12, 1999CórdobaEstadio Chateau Carrera
November 14, 1999SaltaEstadio El Gigante del Norte
November 16, 1999MendozaEstadio Malvinas Argentinas
November 18, 1999San JuanEstadio 27 de Septiembre
November 20, 1999SantiagoChileEstadio Nacional
November 21, 1999Viña del MarAnfiteatro de la Quinta Vergara
November 22, 1999[b]SantiagoEstadio San Carlos de Apoquindo
November 24, 1999AntofagastaEstadio Regional de Antofagasta
November 27, 1999TemucoEstadio Municipal Germán Becker
December 1, 1999QuilmesArgentinaEstadio Quilmes
December 3, 1999MontevideoUruguayEstadio Centenario
December 8, 1999CaracasVenezuelaPoliedro de Caracas[55][56]
December 9, 1999
December 11, 1999MaracaiboPlaza Monumental
North America - Leg 2[57]
February 1, 2000BakersfieldUnited StatesCentennial Garden3,477 / 4,411$107,560
February 3, 2000Los AngelesUniversal Amphitheater24,012 / 27,416$1,580,042
February 4, 2000
February 5, 2000
February 6, 2000
February 7, 2000
February 12, 2000MinneapolisOrpheum Theatre1,770 / 2,161$113,660
February 14, 2000FairfaxPatriot Center3,173 / 5,823$122,550
February 16, 2000New York CityRadio City Music Hall18,947 / 24,052$1,367,140
February 17, 2000
February 18, 2000
February 19, 2000
February 24, 2000Mexico CityMexicoNational Auditorium183,688 / 203,343$8,340,209
February 25, 2000
February 26, 2000
February 27, 2000
March 1, 2000
March 2, 2000
March 3, 2000
March 4, 2000
March 5, 2000
March 6, 2000
March 8, 2000
March 9, 2000
March 10, 2000
March 11, 2000
March 12, 2000
March 15, 2000
March 16, 2000
March 17, 2000
March 18, 2000
March 19, 2000
March 20, 2000
March 24, 2000MiamiUnited StatesAmerican Airlines Arena18,849 / 20,000$1,177,437
March 25, 2000
March 26, 2000LakelandJenkins Arena2,269 / 2,269$128,526
March 28, 2000ChicagoUnited Center7,328 / 10,000$550,075
March 31, 2000LowellTsongas Arena4,175 / 6,161$214,480
April 1, 2000Atlantic CityMark G. Etess ArenaN/aN/a
April 5, 2000South Padre IslandSP Convention Center
April 6, 2000
April 7, 2000San AntonioAlamodome9,539 / 15,000$577,486
April 10, 2000HoustonCompaq Center9,241 / 10,843$571,885
April 13, 2000[c]MonterreyMexicoAuditorio Coca-Cola56,754 / 75,000$1,954,548
April 14, 2000
April 15, 2000
April 16, 2000
April 17, 2000
April 19, 2000DallasUnited StatesStarplex Amphitheatre4,369 / 5,200$298,264
April 21, 2000El PasoDon Haskins Center11,352 / 18,000$740,411
April 22, 2000
April 25, 2000[d]DenverMagness Arena2,561 / 5,000$149,985
April 27, 2000AnaheimArrowhead Pond8,760 / 10,352$385,520
April 28, 2000San JoseSan Jose Arena6,264 / 11,647$450,245
April 29, 2000Las VegasMandalay Bay Events Center5,779 / 7,988$474,410
May 2, 2000TucsonTCC Arena3,011 / 6,000$219,248
May 3, 2000PhoenixDesert Sky Pavilion10,944 / 19,634$142,984
May 5, 2000[e]San DiegoCox Arena8,398 / 8,398$541,656
May 6, 2000Chula VistaCoors Amphitheatre6,613 / 10,000$407,047
Total411,273 / 508,698 (80,8%)$20,615,368

Cancelled shows

[edit]
List of cancelled concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, and reason for cancellation
DateCityCountryVenueReason
October 29, 1999San BernardinoParaguayAnfiteatro José Asunción FloresLogistical Problems[60]
December 9, 1999ValenciaVenezuelaForum de ValenciaVargas tragedy[61]
April 30, 2000FresnoUnited StatesSelland ArenaUnknown[62]

Tour personnel

[edit]

Personnel adapted from Allmusic and as perVivo DVD end credits.[63][64]

Performance credits

[edit]

Band


Mariachi 2000

  • Cutberto Pérez - Director, Trumpet
  • Juan Guzmán Acevedo - Trumpet
  • Juan Carlos Navarro - Guitar
  • Miguel Darío González -Guitarrón
  • Juan Carlos Girón -Vihuela
  • Hugo Santiago Ramírez -Violin
  • Mauricio Ramos - Violin
  • Pedro García - Violin
  • José Ignacio Vázquez - Violin
  • Petronilo Godinez - Violin
  • Benjamín Rosas - Violin
  • José Eloy Guerrero - Violin
  • Julio de Santiago - Violin

Technical credits

[edit]
  • Chris Littleton - Tour Manager
  • Marco Gamboa - Programming and Sequence
  • Roberto Ruiz - Road Manager Band
  • Steve "Chopper" Borges - Production Manager
  • Randy "RT" Townsend - Stage Manager
  • Dave Howard - Tour Counter
  • Edith Sánchez - LM Wardrobe
  • Abigail Potter - Tour Manager Assistant
  • Suzanne Graham - Wardrobe and Catering
  • Joe Madera - Security Boss
  • Jim Yakabuski - Room Engineer
  • Mike Jones - LM Monitors
  • Carlos Duarte - Band Monitors
  • Fabián Boggino - Lights Director
  • Pat Brannon - Light Crew Boss
  • Connie Paulson - High End Technical
  • Greg Walker - Dimmer Technical
  • Kurt Springer - V-Dosc Crew Boss
  • Fumi Okazaki - Sound
  • Son Nishimura - Sound
  • Toshio Kumagai - Sound
  • Mick Anger - Video Director
  • Michael Caron - Video Crew Boss
  • Jim Smyk - Video Engineer
  • Phil Evans - Led Screen Technical
  • Sam Herrington - Carpenter Boss
  • Richard Brisson - Pyrotechnic

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The October 9, 1999 concert at Estadio Olímpico de la Cartuja in Seville was originally scheduled to take place on September 24, 1999, but was postponed due to "logistical problems".[51]
  2. ^Gala show for 2,500 people[11]
  3. ^The shows of April 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17 in Monterrey was recorded and later released in a DVD asVivo.[36]
  4. ^The April 25, 2000 concert at Magness Arena in Denver was originally scheduled to take place on February 9, 2000, but was cancelled and postponed due to "family problems".[58]
  5. ^The May 5, 2000 concert at Cox Arena in San Diego was originally scheduled to take place on January 28, 2000, but was postponed due to "logistical problems".[59]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Luis Miguel Biografía".luismigueloficial.com (in Spanish). Archived fromthe original on 30 June 2014. Retrieved10 May 2019.
  2. ^"Tour".lacasadeluismiguel.com. 18 October 2000. Archived fromthe original on 18 October 2000. Retrieved11 May 2019.
  3. ^"Luis Miguel: Friday, Sept. 14, 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. -".Las Vegas Sun. 29 June 2018. Archived fromthe original on 14 September 2018. Retrieved27 October 2018.
  4. ^ab"Luis Miguel inicia en Gijón la gira de su disco 'Amarte es un placer'".El País (in Spanish). 10 September 1999. Retrieved8 March 2017.
  5. ^Lewellyn, Howell (2 October 1999)."Miguel Proudly Sticks To Spanish On 'Amarte' From WMI".Billboard. Vol. 111, no. 40. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. p. 24. Retrieved10 August 2011.
  6. ^García, Manuel Cuadrado; Contrí, Gloria Berenguer (1999).El consumo de servicios culturales (in Spanish). ESIC Editorial. p. 99.ISBN 978-84-7356-302-4.
  7. ^"Biografía de Luis Miguel".Terra Networks (in Spanish).Telefónica. 5 October 2010.Archived from the original on 4 April 2012. Retrieved19 April 2011.
  8. ^"A solas con Luis Miguel".Clarín (in Spanish). 19 September 1999. Retrieved8 March 2017.
  9. ^"El huracán Luismi incluyó un encuentro con Zulemita".Página/12 (in Spanish). Editorial La Página. 6 November 1999. Retrieved8 March 2017.
  10. ^"Chilean Locals, Colombian Giveaways & Argentine Expansion".Billboard. Vol. 112, no. 8. Nielsen Business Media. 19 February 2000. p. LM-6.ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved8 March 2017.
  11. ^ab"Luismi suena fuerte".La Nación. 30 November 1999. Retrieved14 May 2019.
  12. ^"Tour Dates".Billboard. Nielsen Business Media. 28 August 1999. p. 1.ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved8 March 2017.
  13. ^Slambrouck, Paul Van (20 December 1999)."This New Year's Eve, many won't party like it's 1999".The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved8 March 2017.
  14. ^Burr, Ramiro (16 January 2000)."Luis Miguel, Anthony U.S.-bound".San Antonio Express-News. Hearst Corporation.
  15. ^Navarro, Juan Manuel (30 January 2000). "Propone evolucionar".Gente (in Spanish).
  16. ^Lannert, John (18 March 2000)."Ricky, Micky Top of Office".Billboard. Vol. 112, no. 12. Nielsen Business media. p. 46.ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved9 March 2017.
  17. ^abcdBream, Jon (13 February 2000)."Luis Miguel's steamy ballads, indoor fireworks heat up the Orpheum".Star Tribune. Archived fromthe original on 12 March 2017. Retrieved9 March 2017.
  18. ^"Plan Ahead".The Washington Post. Nash Holdings. 14 January 2000. Archived fromthe original on 12 March 2017. Retrieved9 March 2017.
  19. ^"Luis Miguel tras récord".La Nación (in Spanish). Grupo Nación. 18 March 2000. Retrieved9 March 2017.
  20. ^Niurka, Norma (28 March 2000)."La Voz y El Estilo de Luis Miguel Complacen a sus Devotos Admiradores".El Nuevo Herald (in Spanish). The McClatchy Company.
  21. ^Emerick, Laura (30 March 2000)."Luis Miguel at the United Center".Chicago Sun-Times.Sun-Times Media Group. Archived fromthe original on 12 March 2017. Retrieved9 March 2017.
  22. ^"It's No Joke, There's a Ton of Headliners This Week".The Press of Atlantic City. Abarta. 31 March 2000.
  23. ^abClark, Michael D. (12 April 2000). "Luis Miguel branches out for avid fans".Houston Chronicle. Hearst Corporation.
  24. ^"Premian a Luis Miguel por récord de conciertos".El Universal (in Spanish). 21 March 2000. Retrieved9 March 2017.
  25. ^Lannert, John (22 April 2000)."Top Acts Set For Latin Awards Show".Billboard. Vol. 112, no. 17. Nielsen Business Media. p. 49.ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved9 March 2017.
  26. ^"Boxscore Top 10 Concert Grosses".Billboard. Vol. 112, no. 22. Nielsen Business Media. 27 May 2000. p. 18.ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved10 March 2017.
  27. ^Lannert, John (4 March 2000)."WEA Latina Stars Hit Road".Billboard. Vol. 112, no. 10. p. 59. Retrieved10 March 2017.
  28. ^Cobo, Leila (30 December 2000)."Latin Sales Show Slow, Steady Rise".Billboard. Vol. 112, no. 53. Nielsen Media Business. p. 56.ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved10 March 2017.
  29. ^Candelaria, Cordelia (2004). Candelaria, Cordelia; García, Peter J.; Aldama, Arturo J. (eds.).Encyclopedia of Latino Popular Culture in the United States. Vol. 2. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 552.ISBN 978-0-313-32215-0.
  30. ^abTarradell, Mario (20 April 2000). "Unlucky in Love – Fan might have caught Luis Miguel on bad night".The Dallas Morning News. A. H. Belo Corporation.
  31. ^Carbrera, Cloe (28 March 2000)."Ballad king stirs up fan frenzy".The Tampa Tribune. Tampa Media Group.
  32. ^"Luis Miguel se presenta Vivo".El Informador (in Spanish). 17 September 2000. p. 11-D.
  33. ^Chang, Daniel (6 February 2000). "Review: The singer delivers an entertaining mix of good music and spectacle".The Orange County Register. Digital First Media.
  34. ^"Luis Miguel más Vivo que nunca".La Opinión (in Spanish).ImpreMedia. 28 September 2000.
  35. ^Seibert, Peter."Vivo [Video/DVD] – Luis Miguel".AllMusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved10 March 2017.
  36. ^abTarradell, Mario (22 October 2000). "CDs in Brief".The Dallas Morning News.A. H. Belo Corporation.
  37. ^"Luis Miguel más Vivo que nunca".La Opinión (in Spanish).ImpreMedia. 28 September 2000.El sencillo ya se escucha en las estaciones de Estados Unidos, México y Latinoamérica y su lanzamiento pareció intentar un tono patriótico al realizarse el 15 de septiembre para celebrar la Independencia de México.
  38. ^"43rd Grammy Awards".CNN.Time Warner. 21 February 2001. Retrieved1 May 2013.
  39. ^"The Full List of Nominations".Los Angeles Times. 18 July 2001. Retrieved29 April 2013.
  40. ^"Hits of the World".Billboard. Vol. 112, no. 46. Nielsen Business Media. 11 November 2000. p. 73.ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved1 May 2017.
  41. ^"Luis Miguel – Chart history".Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved6 May 2017.
  42. ^"Discos de oro y platino" (in Spanish).Cámara Argentina de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas. Archived fromthe original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved4 November 2012.
  43. ^"Certificaciones" (in Spanish).Asociación Mexicana de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas. Retrieved30 April 2017.TypeLuis Miguel in the box under theARTISTA column heading andVivo in the box under theTÍTULO column heading.
  44. ^Luis Miguel Concierto En Argentina 1999 onYouTube
  45. ^Luis Miguel Tour Vivo Chile 1999 onYouTube
  46. ^"Setlist Leg 1".Setlist.fm. Retrieved12 May 2019.
  47. ^Miguel, Luis (2000).Vivo (DVD). WEA International. back cover. 857384574-2.
  48. ^"Setlist Leg 2".Setlist.fm. Retrieved7 May 2019.
  49. ^"El cantante mexicano Luis Miguel reúne a 6.000 personas en su concierto de Pamplona".El País (in Spanish). 13 September 1999. Retrieved11 May 2019.
  50. ^"Luis Miguel, a la primera fue la vencida".ABC (in Spanish). 16 September 1999. p. 85. Retrieved8 May 2019.
  51. ^"Un bolero olímpico".El Correo de Andalucía (in Spanish). 8 October 1999. p. 39. Retrieved11 May 2019.
  52. ^"Luis Miguel actúa en el estadio de La Cartuja ante 25.000 personas".El País (in Spanish). 9 October 1999. Retrieved11 May 2019.
  53. ^"El romance multitudinario".La Nación (in Spanish). 7 November 1999. Retrieved11 May 2019.
  54. ^"Hubo heridos y detenidos en un recital de Luis Miguel".La Nación (in Spanish). 12 November 1999. Retrieved11 May 2019.
  55. ^"Luis Miguel reaparece con éxito en Venezuela".El Siglo de Torreón (in Spanish). Editora de la Laguna. 9 December 1999. p. 45. Retrieved29 May 2019.
  56. ^"Luis Miguel '99: Amarte es un placer".Venevisión (in Spanish). 11 December 1999. Retrieved11 May 2019.
  57. ^North American boxscore data:
  58. ^"Why Denver?".alt.music.luis-miguel groups.google.com. 9 February 2000. Retrieved29 May 2019.
  59. ^"san diego cancellation".alt.music.luis-miguel groups.google.com. 21 January 2000. Retrieved29 May 2019.
  60. ^"Cancela Luis Miguel su concierto en Paraguay".El Universal (in Spanish). 24 October 1999. Retrieved11 May 2019.
  61. ^"Luis Miguel suspende concierto en Venezuela".El Siglo de Torreón (in Spanish). Editora de la Laguna. 19 November 1999. p. 49. Retrieved29 May 2019.
  62. ^"Fresno show cancelled".alt.music.luis-miguel groups.google.com. 28 April 2000. Retrieved29 May 2019.
  63. ^Miguel, Luis (2000).Vivo (DVD). WEA International. end credits. 857384574-2.
  64. ^"Vivo — Credits".AllMusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved7 May 2019.

External links

[edit]
Studio albums
EPs
Soundtrack albums
Live albums
Compilation albums
Videos
Tours
Related
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