Entre a Mi Mundo

Entre a Mi Mundo
Cover album for Entre a Mi Mundo. Selena is featured in a close-up portrait, posed with her hands entangled in her hair. She wears an unzipped short black jacket with black-and-white patterns adorned on its sleeve, exposing her midriff in front of a clear background. The album title, Entre a Mi Mundo, is written in red cursive at the bottom of the artwork, while Selena's name is presented in red cursive letters in the top left corner.
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 6, 1992 (1992-05-06)
Recorded1991–1992
StudioAMEN (San Antonio, Texas)
GenreTejano cumbia
Length34:16
Language
  • Spanish
  • English
LabelEMI Latin
Producer
Selena chronology
Ven Conmigo
(1990)
Entre a Mi Mundo
(1992)
Selena Live!
(1993)
Selena studio album chronology
Ven Conmigo
(1990)
Entre a Mi Mundo
(1992)
Amor Prohibido
(1994)
Singles from Entre a Mi Mundo
  1. "La Carcacha"
    Released: April 1992
  2. "Como la Flor"
    Released: June 1992
  3. "¿Qué Creias?"
    Released: November 1992
  4. "Amame"
    Released: April 1993

Entre a Mi Mundo (English: Enter My World) is the third studio album by American singer Selena, released on May 6, 1992, by EMI Latin. The label endeavored to bolster Selena's popularity within the Latin music market in the United States with this release. Selena's brother, A. B. Quintanilla kept his role as the singer's producer and, in collaboration with Selena y Los Dinos members Pete Astudillo and Ricky Vela, composed tracks for the album. The ensuing recording encompassed an eclectic array of songs, attributable to the members' diverse backgrounds, which facilitated the modernization of the many genres they explored. Entre a Mi Mundo is a Tejano cumbia album that encapsulated Selena's quintessential sound, characterized by engaging tunes harmonized with her distinctive, plaintive vocals and a relaxed, danceable cumbia beat. The album incorporates musical inspirations from power pop, R&B, disco, rock, funk, and synthesized Tejano music.

The assemblage of tracks featured on the album encompassed lyrics inspired by a myriad of personal experiences and tribulations, delving into themes such as unrequited love, teen romance, women empowerment, and heartbreaks. Entre a Mi Mundo was supported by its singles, including the career-propelling "La Carcacha", the career-defining track "Como la Flor", the crowd-pleaser "¿Qué Creías?", and Selena's ode to guitarist Chris Pérez, "Ámame". Two of the most popular singles, "La Carcacha" received critical acclaim for its quintessential representation of Selena's style, while "Como la Flor" burgeoned as Selena's signature song and her "trademark", serving as both her posthumous epithet and swan song. The song's ubiquity has enshrined it among her most esteemed works, solidifying its stature within the Texas musical canon and rendering it one of the most renowned songs recorded by an artist of Mexican descent in the United States. The preponderance of contemporary reviews lauded Entre a Mi Mundo, conferring widespread critical acclaim. Music critics discerned the album as Selena's "breakthrough album".

Selena promulgated Entre a Mi Mundo through an array of performances and public engagements. In July 1992, EMI Latin president José Behar organized a press tour for Selena in Monterrey, Mexico, attracting a multitude of Mexican entertainment journalists. Despite initial concerns about her limited Spanish proficiency and the perception of Tejanos in Mexico, Selena's approachable demeanor won over the press, who labeled her "an artist of the people". EMI Latin capitalized on the growing popularity of "¿Qué Creías?" and Entre a Mi Mundo, leading to several concert bookings in Mexico. Amid a concert in Monterrey, a sudden influx of attendees precipitated an exigent evacuation of the ensemble to sequester in the tour bus. Selena ultimately re-emerged on stage, asking for calm to enable the band to resume their performance. This occurrence was later portrayed in the 1997 biopic about Selena, starring Jennifer Lopez. Analogously, Selena's participation in Veronica Castro's Y Vero América ¡Va!, broadcast throughout Latin America, was subsequently depicted in Netflix's two-part limited drama Selena: The Series (2020–21), starring Christian Serratos. At the 1993 Lo Nuestro Awards, Selena shared the accolade for Best Regional Mexican Album for Entre a Mi Mundo with La Mafia's Estas Tocando Fuego, while the album procured Album of the Year — Orchestra at the 1993 Tejano Music Awards.

Entre a Mi Mundo peaked at number one on the US Billboard Regional Mexican Albums chart, for eight consecutive months. Critics praised the achievement while Entre a Mi Mundo ended 1993 as the best-selling Regional Mexican Album in the US. The album shattered the record for the longest stay at number one by a female Tejano artist, and it became the inaugural album by a Tejano woman to exceed sales milestones of 100,000, 200,000, and 300,000 units. Entre a Mi Mundo became the second all-time best-selling regional Mexican album in the US since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking sales in 1991. On March 31, 1995, Selena was murdered and Entre a Mi Mundo re-entered the Top Latin Albums and Regional Mexican Albums chart at the fourth position, superseded solely by other Selena releases. It eventually peaked at number 91 on the US Billboard 200 chart. By 1997, Entre a Mi Mundo had amassed 385,000 units in Mexico, marking the highest sales figure by a female Tejano artist within the country. In 2017, Entre a Mi Mundo was certified Diamond (Latin) by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) denoting 600,000 album-equivalent units sold in the US. As of 2018, Entre a Mi Mundo has garnered a cumulative sales total of 1,000,000 copies across the US and Mexico.