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"Yo No Soy Esa Mujer" (transl. "I'm Not That Woman" ) is a song recorded by Mexican singer Paulina Rubio for her fifth studio album , Paulina (2000). It was released as the fourth single from Paulina on April 2, 2001.
Its third single "Y Yo Sigo Aquí", which is often recognised as Rubio's signature international song, received a nomination for the Latin Grammy Award for Song of the Year at the 2001 ceremony became a massive commercial success. Follow-up singles "Yo No Soy Esa Mujer" and "Vive El Verano" also performed
"Yo No Soy Esa Mujer" Christian De Walden Ralf Stemmann Marcello Azevedo Paulina: 2000 [10] "Yo Soy" Paulina Rubio Felipe González Abad Andrés Castro Valentina Rico Omar Luis Sabino Andy Clay Non-album single 2021 [47]
"Yo No Soy Esa Mujer", "Vive El Verano" and "Tal Vez, Quizá" was produced in 2001. The video for "Yo No Soy Esa Mujer", directed by Gustavo Garzón, earned an nomination Latin Grammy Awards for Best Short Form Music Video.
The third single, "Y Yo Sigo Aquí", reached number one in over 30 countries, becoming Rubio's most successful single to date. The fourth single, the feminist anthem "Yo No Soy Esa Mujer", is considered one of the best songs of the 2000, according to Spin, [86] while Billboard named it one of the 100 greatest songs of 2001. [87]
"Cómo Me La Maravillaría Yo" (live from el Gran Teatre Liceu de Barcelona) 2008 Rosario Parte De Mí "Un Beso Y Una Flor" 2009 None 40 Años Con Nino "No Más Traiciones" 2009 Sergio Vallín: Bendito Entre Las Mujeres "No Al Alguacil" 2011 Gloria Trevi: Gloria "Mal De Amores" 2013 Juan Magán: Mal De Amores - The Remixes
He earned Latin Grammy nominations for his work with Paulina Rubio (“Yo No Soy Esa Mujer”, Best Music Video, as a composer) and Luz Rios (“Aire”, Best New Artist and Best Female Pop Vocal Album, as producer). He also won the 20th Annual USA Songwriting Competition in the Latin category with the song "Enamorados" with Luz Rios in 2014.
[11] "Not That Kind of Girl" is the original version of the previously Spanish-version "Yo No Soy Esa Mujer" (from Paulina), the song is a little more arena-pop song that reflects on the tensions following a relationship. It holds the empowered and feminist anthem of the first recording.