The single "Grítenme Piedras del Campo" peaked at number 15 on the Hot Latin Tracks chart.
I kept waking up in the middle of the night thinking that the musicians who know this music are old, and if they go I won't have anybody to help me do it.
Pete Ronstadt at the time was the chief of police in Tucson, Arizona, where Mike owned a hardware store.
Except for the professional guitar-playing, Ronstadt said, the arrangements are the same as those they sang in the living room when they were growing up.
[3] In his AllMusic review, critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine called the album a "thoroughly enjoyable collection of Spanish and Mexican songs that is arguably stronger than its predecessor, since Ronstadt sounds more comfortable with the material than ever before.