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  2. Libertad (La Ley album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertad_(La_Ley_album)

    Libertad is La Ley's seventh studio album. It was inspired primarily by the September 11 attacks. The album contains the hits "Ámate y Sálvate", "Más allá" and "Mi Ley". This is the band’s second studio album as a trio.

  3. MTV Unplugged (La Ley album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MTV_Unplugged_(La_Ley_album)

    In 2001, Chilean rock band La Ley participated in MTV's Unplugged series in Miami, Florida, US. [1] The album MTV Unplugged contains the recordings of the live concert and is to this date the band's best selling album, with sales of 1.5 million copies worldwide.

  4. Ely Guerra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ely_Guerra

    Ely Guerra (born Elizabeth Guerra Vázquez, February 13, 1972) is a Mexican singer-songwriter who was raised in Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico.The daughter of Alberto Guerra and Gloria Vázquez, Guerra lived the first years of her life in Monterrey, where she was born, before moving to San Luis Potosí and then to Guadalajara, due to her father's work.

  5. La Ley (band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Ley_(band)

    After an unsuccessful first album, Desiertos (1990), they released Doble Opuesto (1991), which appears as the official first album of the band. Singles like "Desiertos," "Tejedores de Ilusión," and "Prisioneros de la Piel" made them stars in Chile, Argentina and Mexico [citation needed], especially after the release of La Ley, their second recording (1993).

  6. La Ley discography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Ley_discography

    In 1993 released La Ley, in 1995 released Invisible; Vértigo in 1998. In 1999 released Uno, which is considered to be their most successful album to date, and their last one Libertad. They also performed on MTV Unplugged, and released a greatest hits compilation, Historias e Histeria. The band reunited in 2014.

  7. La Ley (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Ley_(album)

    La Ley is the band's third album. It was produced by Alejandro Sanfuentes and released in February 1993 by Polygram. The album includes the number one hits "Tejedores de Ilusión" (which was used in a nationwide Pepsi campaign in Chile) and "Auto-Ruta (Feel the Skin)", whose music video was banned from some television shows such as Canal 13's Más Música because of explicit content.

  8. Invisible (La Ley album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invisible_(La_Ley_album)

    Invisible is La Ley's fourth album. It is their second best selling album. The album reunites La Ley again with Rodrigo Aboitiz and invites a new member, Pedro Furgone, after the death of founder Andres Bobe. The album begins the dark era of La Ley. It was also La Ley's first album to have a song completely in French ("Deuxième Fois").

  9. Retour (La Ley album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retour_(La_Ley_album)

    Retour is the third compilation album of the Chilean group La Ley, which was launched in 2014 to mark the return of the group to the stage, having been nine years since their separation in 2005. This compilation album includes only songs from Warner Music.