King of Kings | ||||||||||||||
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Studio album by Don Omar | ||||||||||||||
Released | May 23, 2006 December 19, 2006 (re-edition) |
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Recorded | 2005–06 | |||||||||||||
Genre | Reggaeton, dancehall, bachaton, hip hop, ballad | |||||||||||||
Label | Machete Music, VI Music | |||||||||||||
Producer |
Eliel Henry R. Santos Nesty "La Mente Maestra" Nely "El Arma Secreta" Naldo Yai & Toly (Los Nativos) Danny Fornaris Echo & Diesel |
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Don Omar chronology | ||||||||||||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic |
King of Kings is Don Omar's second studio album. It was released on May 23, 2006 three years after his debut studio album The Last Don. In part reflective and contemplative, in another part explosive, evidenced by Beenie Man collaboration "Belly Danza." Spearheaded by Eliel, the sprawling 18 tracks of King of Kings vary in genre; the lead single, "Angelito", is moody in reggaeton-style. The album was 11 weeks at the peak of Billboard Top Latin Albums in 2006.
The special edition of the album was leaked online earlier than its release. Because of it, it was never released into the market. But leaked tracks included:
Track #1–18 from standard edition, and includes a second disc and DVD.
These are tracks that never made it to the album yet they exist.
It debuted in its first week at #7 on the Billboard 200 and #1 on the Latin Billboard Charts. The album peaked on the Billboard 200 at #7, the highest rank in reggaeton history, shared only by Wisin & Yandel's Wisin vs. Yandel: Los Extraterrestres which peaked at #15 and Daddy Yankee's El Cartel: The Big Boss which was #9. And Wisin & Yandel, La Revolucion #07 and Los Vaqueros: El Regreso #08
^shipments figures based on certification alone