"Ese Hombre" is a song written by Ana Magdalena and Manuel Alejandro and performed by Spanish recording artistRocío Jurado for her studio albumSeñora. It was released by RCA Records as a B-side to "Señora" in 1980. In 1994, American salsa singer La India recorded the track for her first solo album, Dicen Que Soy, which was produced by Sergio George. Lyrically, the song is about a womanizer who lures women into a wrongful relationship filled with lies and deceit. "Ese Hombre" is the salsa song responsible for La India's honorific title as the "Princess of Salsa", according to The New York Times. The recording received positive reviews and acclaim from media respondents. "Ese Hombre" peaked at number one on the US BillboardTropical Songs chart and peaked within the top 20 on the US BillboardHot Latin Tracks and Latin Pop Songs charts. The track became La India's second number-one single on the Tropical Songs chart behind, "Nunca Voy a Olvidarte".
Background and release
In 1979, Rocío Jurado recorded "Ese Hombre" for her studio album Señora. It was released by RCA Records as a B-side to "Señora" in 1980. La India recorded the song for her second studio album, Dicen Que Soy. Because of its heavy airplay on radios, the single boosted sales for the parent album. The song was written by Manuel Alejandro and Ana Magdalena for Spanish singer Rocío Jurado. Jurado sung a duet version with Rosario Mohedano during one of her live tours. RMM selected "Ese Hombre" among its top tenmusic videos for their compilation albumRMM Best of Videos Vol. I. "Ese Hombre" is a salsa song set in common time at 88 beats per minute. According to the lyrics, the protagonist is describing negative attributes about a former lover who uses a false identity to capture and lure women into deceitful ill-fated relationships.
Reception
Lise Waxer wrote in her book Situating Salsa: Global Markets and Local Meanings in Latin Popular Music, that "Ese Hombre" is a "strong feminist song". Virginia Marie Raymond wrote in her book Mexican Americans Write Toward Justice in Texas, 1973--1982 that the lyrics are "rousingly hostile", while John Lannert of Billboard magazine praised the recording's lyrical content calling it a "fiery, stand-up-to-that-man testimony". David Cazares of the Sun Sentinel called the track an "outrageous song that bashes an egotistical and womanizing man". Cazares believed the track suited La India because it revamped her salsa career. Ramiro Burr of the San Antonio Express-News named "Ese Hombre" and another La India recording, "Nunca Voy Olvidarte" as "radio hits". Manuel Peter wrote that "Ese Hombre" is an "anthem for female salsa lovers". Larry Flick of Billboard, called the recording a "tropical purity". According to Jose Manuel Simian of The New York Times, "Ese Hombre" contributed to La India being named the "Princess of Salsa". Madeline Rodriguez of Gozamos.com named "Ese Hombre" the "perfect break-up song". Jim Allen of AllMusic, called the song a "propulsive, no-nonsense attack" that "deliver a resonant portrait of this contemporary salsa sensation."
Chart history
Credits and personnel
Credits adapted from the Allmusic and Dicen Que Soy liner notes.