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In 1987, ex-Aparato Raro member Rodrigo Aboitiz, ex-Paraíso Perdido member Andrés Bobe, and ex-<a href="spotify:artist:0tqvTB10tF7nCr8Xj4FEx1">Nadie</a> member Shia Arbulu formed a techno-pop ensemble called La Ley. After issuing an EP, Aboitiz and Arbulu left the band to get involved in different projects, and Bobe teamed up with ex-Pancho Puelma drummer Mauricio Clavería, ex-Paraíso Perdido member Luciano Rojas, and newcomer <a href="spotify:artist:0kUZTk2JLPEAUyCWoN6eoL">Beto Cuevas</a> (born <a href="spotify:artist:0kUZTk2JLPEAUyCWoN6eoL">Luis Alberto Cuevas Olmedo</a>).

After releasing the hit single "Desiertos," the Chilean pop/rock ensemble emerged with its first full-length record, Doble Opuesto, featuring a cover of <a href="spotify:artist:22bE4uQ6baNwSHPVcDxLCe">the Rolling Stones</a>' "Angie." La Ley soon achieved local rock sensation status. Sadly, founder Andrés Bobe passed away after a car accident in April 1994. Nevertheless, the group pressed on with ex-Anachena guitarist Pedro Frugone, releasing Invisible in 1995 and Vértigo three years later. The Grammy-winning MTV Unplugged, the follow-up to the Latin alternative pop/rock album Uno, became their first top-selling album throughout Latin America. Based on this success, both <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22WEA%22">WEA</a> and <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Universal%22">Universal</a> released compilations in 2002, followed by a new studio album, Libertad, in 2003.

The group called it a day in 2005 after playing a string of farewell dates, culminating in a massive show in Buenos Aires. In 2008, the group re-formed and cut Las de Ley de La Ley for <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22WEA+Latina%22">WEA Latina</a>, followed by another South American tour. The trio took another extended break shortly thereafter as each of its members pursued solo projects. In early 2014, La Ley re-formed again and released Retour, which featured songs from throughout their catalog -- including three tracks from their MTV Unplugged performance -- and one new song entitled "Olividar." It was followed by a tour of Mexico and Central and South America.

The tour spurred inspiration between Cuevas and Clavería. They entered a recording studio in Los Angeles in mid 2015 and set down a new tracks--their first new studio material since 2003. The pre-release single "Ya no estás," released in January the following year revealed the band still had their magic. The album entitled Adaptación, featured a dozen new songs. and issued digitally on April 8, 2016, with the physical product appearing two weeks later. The new recording was followed by a 20-plus city Chilean tour and a summer trek through Mexico. ~ Drago Bonacich, Rovi

Monthly Listeners

5.2 million

Followers

1.7 million

Total Streams

1.2 billion

Top Cities

634,962 listeners
511,926 listeners
161,290 listeners
154,245 listeners
144,784 listeners

Popular Tracks

143 tracks
1
Mentira

Mentira

Jan 1, 0000

246.8 million

streams

2
El Duelo

El Duelo

Jul 21, 1995

148.2 million

streams

3
El Duelo (feat. Ely Guerra)

El Duelo (feat. Ely Guerra)

Jan 1, 0000

125.2 million

streams

4
Día Cero

Día Cero

Jul 21, 1995

93.8 million

streams

5
Día cero - Remastered

Día cero - Remastered

Nov 18, 2004

93.8 million

streams

6
Aquí

Aquí

Feb 21, 2000

62.5 million

streams

7
Fuera de mí

Fuera de mí

Sep 4, 2001

34.7 million

streams

8
Sin Ti

Sin Ti

Jul 15, 2014

27.6 million

streams

9
Doble Opuesto

Doble Opuesto

Oct 13, 1991

27.4 million

streams

10
Aquí

Aquí

Sep 4, 2001

24.6 million

streams