Latest Release
- SEP 20, 2024
- 1 Song
- ¿Dónde Jugarán los Niños? · 1992
- Revolución de Amor · 2002
- Amar Es Combatir · 2006
- Drama y Luz (Edición Deluxe) · 2011
- Sueños Líquidos · 1997
- Amar Es Combatir (Deluxe Version) · 2006
- Sueños Líquidos · 1997
- Revolución de Amor · 2002
- Supernatural (Remastered) [Bonus Track Version] · 1999
- Falta Amor · 1990
Essential Albums
- With their 1992 release, the Mexican pop-rockers secured their status as the most universal—and consistent—band in the Spanish-speaking world. By serving up equal parts tequila-drenched party anthems (“Oye Mi Amor”), power ballads laced with metaphors (“Vívír Sin Airé”), bouncy ska-punk numbers (“Me vale”), and social activism (“¿Dónde Jugarán los Niños?”), the boys found the perfect recipe for success and stuck to it. All these years later, it’s still paying off.
Albums
- 2011
Artist Playlists
- Global grooves from the multi-platinum kings of rock en español.
- They've had their iconic moments, but the new moves keep coming.
- The rowdy Mexican rockers get sensitive.
- The Mexican rock band delves into pop and reggae.
- The Mexican group look to pioneers of classic rock and pop.
Compilations
Appears On
About Maná
Mexican behemoths Maná have transcended their country’s rock scene to become one of the most widely recognized and celebrated Latin music acts in the world. They were in the right place at the right time, for sure, but they also had all the right ideas. Fronted by singer Fher Olvera, the Guadalajara quartet officially announced itself to the world with the release of their self-titled debut studio album in 1987 at a key moment when record labels were eager to capitalize on the rock en español tag. Through their 1992 effort ¿Donde Jugarán los Niños?, the band emerged as one of the pillars of the movement in Mexico, along with fellow countrymen Café Tacvba and Caifanes. Yet, as the ‘90s ended, they made clear they were more than a product of the decade’s hype by switching musical directions for genre-bending releases like “Corazón Espinado” (1999), featuring Carlos Santana, and the band’s iconic MTV Unplugged (1999). This omnivorous quality would characterize the band’s sound––and echo across much of rock music––in the decades after. It was most visible on the group’s 2015 effort Cama Incendiada, which found Maná fully embracing cumbia, merengue, bachata, and other tropical sounds of the Americas.
- ORIGIN
- Guadalajara, Mexico
- FORMED
- 1981
- GENRE
- Rock y Alternativo