She benefited from Pérez producing the important reggaetón television show "The Roof", which aired on mun2 and detailed urban music and lifestyle by frequently appearing and performing on the show. 1 which Pérez released after several major record labels turn him down. They appeared on the label's first album Jams Vol. In 2003, Queen and her then-husband Gran Omar signed with Real Music, an independent label based in Miami, Florida and established by Jorge Guadalupe and Anthony Pérez.
In 20, Queen began appearing on reggaeton compilation albums spawning hits like " Quiero Bailar" from The Majestic 2 and "Quiero Saber" from Kilates. This occurred after she left Sony and "stepped out of Wyclef Jean's shadow". However, it was critically acclaimed by many including an editor for Allmusic who awarded the album four out of five stars and listed it as an selected "Allmusic Pick". Though the moderate hit, " In The Zone" with Wyclef Jean was able to chart in the United States, the unsuccessful second single "Ritmo Latino" and the album The Original Rude Girl were not and were overlooked and soon forgotten.
The song was performed as a part of the set of her 2008 World Tour which was held from the José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum, also known as the Coliseum of Puerto Rico in San Juan, Puerto Rico.Īfter the failed commercial success of Ivy Queen's first two studio albums, En Mi Imperio (1997) and The Original Rude Girl (1998) Queen was dropped from the Sony label and took a hiatus from her musical career in 1999. Ivy Queen performed the English version of the song on ABC's Good Morning America. In the music video, she sports the Los Angeles Lakers' women's sport outfit. There is a music video associated with the song released along with the music video for the last single off the album "Tu No Puedes". On digital editions of the album, Anthony Kelly, co-writer of "Like Glue", is credited as being featured on the song, though, provides no vocals. The song heavily samples Sean Paul's " Like Glue" released a year earlier. It was composed by Queen and her then husband Gran Omar, produced by Tony "CD" Kelly and Rafi Mercenario and released as the third single from the album in 2004. " Papi Te Quiero" ( English: Daddy I Love You) is a song by Puerto Rican reggaetón recording artist Ivy Queen, from the platinum edition of her third studio album, Diva (2003).