[1][2] Medina's professional songwriting career began in December 1992, when "Para Que Te Quedes Conmigo" (To Keep You With Me), performed by Mexican superstar Daniela Romo, reached number-one in Billboard Magazine's Hot Latin Tracks Chart.
[3] The song remained in the top three chart positions for twelve consecutive weeks and went on to become one of the year's biggest Latin music hits in the United States, Central and South America.
Shortly after his first hit, Spanish superstar, Rocío Jurado, included Medina's "Yo Te Amo" (I Love You) on her 1993 album "Como Las Alas Al Viento" (Like the Wings in the Wind).
His ample catalog includes rumba flamencas, ballads, boleros and tangos, and Medina has written songs in the regional Mexican, pop, tropical, and rock music styles.
In 2001, two of Medina's poems ("Agua Esclava" - Slave Water and "Mujer" - Woman) were selected for another Argentine literary publication entitled, "Diccionario De Poetas Hispano-Americanos Contemporaneos (2001)", (Dictionary of Contemporary Hispanic-American Poets).