"La Incondicional" | ||||
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Single by Luis Miguel | ||||
from the album Busca una Mujer | ||||
B-side | "Separados" | |||
Released | 1989 | |||
Format | Airplay · Promo single | |||
Recorded | 1987-1988 Estudios 55 Ocean Way Recording Studios Suma Music Group (Hollywood, California) Torres Sonido (Madrid, Spain) Mediterranean Sound Studio (Ibiza, Spain) |
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Genre | Latin | |||
Length | 4:27 | |||
Label | WEA Latina | |||
Writer(s) | Juan Carlos Calderón | |||
Producer(s) | Juan Carlos Calderón | |||
Luis Miguel singles chronology | ||||
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"La Incondicional" (English: "Unconditional") is a pop song written, produced, and arranged by Juan Carlos Calderón and performed by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. It was released in 1989 as the third single from his studio album entitled Busca una Mujer (1988) and became his second #1 single on the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks chart after "Ahora Te Puedes Marchar" in 1987. The song broke several airplay records in Latin America reaching the top of the charts in Mexico (where it became the biggest hit of the year), Argentina and Chile among many other countries. The success of the song helped push the album to #4 on the Billboard Latin Pop Albums with approximate sales of three million units.
"La Incondicional" won Pop Song of the Year at the Premios Lo Nuestro in 1990. In 2008, VH1 Latin America aired the program entitled The 100 Greatest Songs of the '80s in Spanish which declared "La Incondicional" as the #1 Spanish track of the 1980s.
The song debuted on the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks chart at #32 the week of April 1, 1989. After its first week at #32, it dropped out of the chart for one week but then reentered the following week at #36 and climbed all the way to the Top Ten the week of May 6, 1989. "La Incondicional" reached #1 the week of May 27, 1989, and held this position for seven consecutive weeks (replacing "Cómo Tú" by José José and being replaced by "Baila Mi Rumba" by José Luis Rodríguez. "La Incondicional" ranked third in the Hot Latin Tracks Year-End Chart of 1989 and became Luis Miguel's second #1 single in the United States following "Ahora Te Puedes Marchar" which reached #1 two years earlier. In Latin America, reached number-one on the Guatemalan Spanish Charts and in Ecuador. The song was certified gold in Mexico.