La Ley

La Ley - Chilean rock band

Group from Chile

Genres: chile, rock, Latin Rock, Rock en Espanol, spanish

La Ley

About La Ley

La Ley (Spanish for "The Law") was a Grammy Award and two-time Latin Grammy Award-winning Chilean pop rock band formed by Andrés Bobe and Rodrigo Aboitiz with Mauricio Claveria, Beto Cuevas and Luciano Rojas in Santiago, Chile. They were originally formed in 1987, and was meant to be a techno/new rave band led by a female vocalist. The original vocalist of the band was Lucía "Shia" Arbulu, female singer that returned to her hometown, Spain, in 1988, shortly after the release of the first EP of the group, which was entitled La Luna. This release that was later not considered part of La Ley's discography. Some time after Beto Cuevas joined as the new vocalist, and after a failed first album, Desiertos (1989), they released Doble Opuesto (1990), which appears as the official first album of the band. Singles like "Desiertos," "Tejedores de Ilusión," and "Prisioneros de la Piel" made them popular in Chile, Argentina and Mexico, especially after the release of La Ley, their second recording (1992). After Bobe's death in 1994, La Ley continued with a new guitarist, Pedro Frugone, and released two more albums, Invisible (1995) and Vértigo (1998). Before the release of Vertigo, Rodrigo Aboitiz left the band, and in 1999, in the middle of the tour, bassist Luciano Rojas, left the band. They went on to form a new group named Saiko with former La Ley member, Ivan Delgado. Their music became more pop and less experimental, and the musicians dropped their dark image. Not all of their fans were on board with the new style, but the album, Uno (2000), showed their maturation as a band and as a group. The band also became a trio after the departures of Rodrigo Aboitiz and Luciano Rojas. The album won the Grammy Award for Best Latin Rock/Alternative Album. La Ley also performed on MTV Unplugged in 2001, and released an album of the performance, which went on to win a Latin Grammy award. Libertad (2003) is La Ley's last official album, also earning them their second Latin Grammy. In 2004, they released a greatest hits compilation (featuring three new songs: Mírate, Bienvenido al Anochecer, and Histeria) titled Historias e Histeria. In 2005 Rodrigo Aboitiz and Luciano Rojas performed with the band at the Viña del Mar International Song Festival (Spanish: Festival Internacional de la Canción de Viña del Mar) and after a tour around Latin America, the band said goodbye in Buenos Aires on September 29 of the same year, to work in their personal projects. They left open the possibility for a come back of La Ley in the future though. The band, as a trio, reunited on 2014 for a reunion tour, and they eventually released a new album, "Adaptación", before singer Beto Cuevas ended the band once again on 2016.

Taken from Last.fm

243,620 listeners  ·  4,212,686 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

5
stations playing
10
countries
12
tracks tracked

Radio Stations sorted by tracks on rotation

La Ley — Top 30 songs of 79

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
La Ley Eternidad
La Ley Intenta Amar
La Ley Sin Ti (Video Oficial)
La Ley Mentira (Unplugged)
La Ley Tejedores De Ilusi�n
La Ley El Duelo
La Ley Mentira
La Ley Aqui
La Ley Aquí
La Ley Día Cero
La Ley Prisioneros De La Piel
La Ley Fuera De Mi
La Ley Tejedores de Ilusión
La Ley Doble opuesto
La Ley Prisioneros de la piel
La Ley Desiertos
La Ley Amar Para Deshacer
La Ley Por un Binocular
La Ley Dia Cero
La Ley Fuera de Mí
La Ley Mentira (MTV Unplugged)
La Ley Día cero
La Ley Prisioneros de la piel (1991)
La Ley Doble Opuesto
La Ley Hombre
La Ley Vi
La Ley Angie
La Ley Mas Alla
La Ley Fuera De Mí
La Ley Cielo market
Eternidad
Intenta Amar
Sin Ti (Video Oficial)
Mentira (Unplugged)
Tejedores De Ilusi�n
El Duelo
Mentira
Aquí
Día Cero
Prisioneros De La Piel
Fuera De Mi
Tejedores de Ilusión
Doble opuesto
Prisioneros de la piel
Desiertos
Amar Para Deshacer
Por un Binocular
Dia Cero
Fuera de Mí
Mentira (MTV Unplugged)
Día cero
Prisioneros de la piel (1991)
Doble Opuesto
Hombre
Angie
Mas Alla
Fuera De Mí
Cielo market