

But Sanz’s creative international breakthrough came with his fifth studio album, 1997’s Más, brimming with heartfelt passion on poetic classics like “Corazón Partío” and “Amiga Mía.” His star continued to rise in the following decade when he joined forces with Shakira for 2005’s “La Tortura,” a deliciously flirty track about overpowering sexual tension. Grandes Éxitos 19912004 is the first greatest hits album from Spanish singer-songwriter Alejandro Sanz.The album assembles his previous hits in two CDs the first contains songs from 1991 to 1996 of the albums Viviendo Deprisa, Si Tú Me Miras, Básico and 3 and the second the hits from 1997 to 2004 of the albums Más, El Alma al Aire, MTV Unplugged and No Es lo Mismo. Throughout the ‘90s, the singer/songwriter collaborated with flamenco legends like Paco de Lucía and delved into socially conscious songwriting (“Por Bandera”). Alejandro Sanz Grandes xitos 19912004 Coleccin Definitiva. Two years later, the musician used his own name for the release of his major-label debut, Viviendo Deprisa, with which he solidified his reputation as the quixotic Spanish lover. Ms (More) is the fifth studio album recorded by Spanish singer-songwriter Alejandro Sanz. El único sencillo extraído fue el inédito Tú No Tienes Alma. El álbum recopila grandes éxitos de Sanz con un DVD con sus videos musicales y rarezas.

In 1989, he launched his music career with his debut Los Chulos Son Pa’ Cuidarlos, which skillfully combined techno and flamenco, under the pseudonym of Alejandro Magno. Grandes Éxitos 9104 es una caja recopilatoria de Alejandro Sanz lanzado por Warner Music el 16 de noviembre de 2004. At 10 years old, he was already writing his own songs. Born Alejandro Sánchez Pizarro in Madrid, Spain in 1968 to parents from Andalusia, the flamenco capital, the Spanish prodigy began playing guitar at the tender age of seven, a skill he inherited from his musician father. The Spanish troubadour also penned some of the most achingly romantic songs of Latin pop, bolstered by his sensuous Andalusian rasp. In the ‘90s, as established Spanish pop stars competed for airplay against burgeoning rock en español upstarts, Alejandro Sanz concocted a riveting sound all his own with an irresistible mix of emotional pop balladry and flamenco soft rock.
