
All of Selena’s Albums, Ranked (Staff Picks)
In the ‘90s, Selena Quintanilla singlehandedly revolutionized the Tejano genre, fusing her authentic Mexican roots with bold new sounds such as R&B, pop, dance and rock.
With her bubbly charm, dazzling aura and a universal appeal, which powered hits like “Como La Flor,” “Dreaming of You,” “Amor Prohibido” and “Bidi Bidi Bom Bom,” the artist, known as the Queen of Tejano, shattered ceilings in a genre that was predominantly dominated by men, earning a zealous fanbase both in the U.S. and in Mexico.
Well on her way to a major mainstream crossover, the Mexican-American powerhouse was tragically shot dead on March 31, 1995 at the age of 23. However, her music and legacy has stood the test of time and, along the way, she’s influenced a new generation of hitmakers, making her a bona fide Latin icon in pop culture 30 years later.
On the Billboard charts, Selena earned 24 entries on Top Latin Albums, 16 of which hit top 10 and seven No. 1’s—among them Amor Prohibido, spending 20 weeks at the top in 1994 and Dreaming of You, released posthumously, which spent 40 weeks at the top in 1995. On the Regional Mexican Albums and Latin Pop Albums charts, the late artist placed seven and six No. 1 titles, respectively. Amor Prohibido topped the former chart for nearly 100 weeks.
As a testament to her enduring legacy, the Quintanilla family released Moonchild Mixes in 2022 — an album with 10 previously unreleased songs that the superstar recorded between the ages of 13 and 16. The set peaked at No. 1 on the Latin Pop Albums chart that same year.
“We as a family had discussed this amongst ourselves that in the future, after Selena’s passing, we were going to maintain her presence through her music and we’ve done that,” A.B. Quintanilla, Selena’s dad, previously told Billboard. “I’m more than sure that the fans are going to love it because if you listen to it, it’ll move you emotionally and take you back to as if Selena was recording it this morning.”
Here, Billboard ranks the albums that make up Selena’s incomparable recorded legacy. There are also a handful of compilation and live albums released throughout her career and after her passing — including Live!, which won the Grammy award for Best Mexican-American Album in 1994 — but while some have entered the Billboard charts, we are ranking only the studio albums released since her EMI Latin label debut in 1989. See our list below.
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Selena (1989)
Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Marking Selena’s debut album under EMI Latin, the 11-track set embodied a new musical era for Selena y Los Dinos — one that would set the tone for the future of the singer and the group. While songs such as “Tu Eres,” “Besitos,” and “Amame, Quiereme” conserved that fresh and authentic Tejano sound, Selena also effortlessly delivered a freestyle dance track in English (“My Love”), a Japanese-inspired bop (“Sukiyaki”), and a chill reggae tune (“No Te Vayas”).
“It was scary for everyone because this was a huge label, and at this point we couldn’t afford to take a failure,” A.B. Quintanilla III said on the album’s spoken liners. “As time would tell, it was a very successful album for Selena. She just breathed something special into the songs. This was our first masterpiece of many to come. It had pop, R&B, we got trendier and it was cutting-edge.”
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Dreaming of You (1995)
Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Selena’s fifth and last studio album, the 13-track set was released posthumously by EMI Latin and EMI Records in July 1995, four months after she was shot dead. The landmark album, Selena’s English crossover LP, was a fusion of pop and R&B songs in English and Spanish, such as “Dreaming of You” and “I Could Fall in Love,” and also included some of Selena and Los Dinos’ biggest previous techno cumbia hits, including “Amor Prohibido,” “Como La Flor” and “Bidi Bidi Bom Bom.”
Dreaming of You was an immediate success, becoming the first mostly Spanish-language album to debut at the top of the Billboard 200, ruling for one week. Over on Top Latin Albums, the set spent a whopping total of 44 weeks at No. 1.
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Ven Conmigo (1990)
Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Powered by the success of her label debut, Selena’s brother A.B. continued as Selena’s primary producer and songwriter (alongside Pete Astudillo as co-writer) on sophomore set Ven Conmigo. With an evolved sound, the set offers a mix of love songs and despecho (heartbreak), including “Ya Ves,” “Ven Conmigo” and “Yo Me Voy,” the latter of which was penned by Juan Gabriel. Ven Conmigo, which peaked at No. 3 on the Regional Mexican Albums chart, is also home to the more commercial tunes “Baila Esta Cumbia” and “No Quiero Saber.” The latter, a feel-good dance track encouraging world peace, peaked at No. 6 on the Hot Latin Songs chart. In 2019, Ven Conmigo was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry.
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Entre a Mi Mundo (1992)
Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Entre a Mi Mundo (Enter my World) not only solidified Selena y Los Dinos’ edgy techno-cumbia sound, but it also put them on an international map. With commercial bangers such as the timeless “Como La Flor,” the flirty “La Carcacha,” the empowering “Tu Que Creías” and the heartfelt “Buenos Amigos” (in collaboration with Alvaro Torres), Entre a Mi Mundo spent 19 weeks at No. 1 on the Regional Mexican Albums chart.
“We were solid as a rock,” Suzette Quintanilla, Selena’s sister and drummer of Los Dinos, said on the album’s spoken liner notes. “It’s one of the best albums that we have released and it showed the versatility we had musically. We were very strong. If you look at ‘La Carcacha’ and ‘Como La Flor,’ you can hear the different sounds of cumbia that made people recognize us as Selena y Los Dinos. Entre a mi Mundo is a very proud album for all of us.”
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Amor Prohibido (1994)
Image Credit: Courtesy Photo Few albums catapulted a genre while simultaneously breaking cultural barriers with such effortless charm as Amor Prohibido — Selena’s magnum opus, a fusion of Tex-Mex cumbia with pop accessibility, internationalizing a sound that was uniquely hers. The title track became an anthem for forbidden love, while the mariachi-driven “No Me Queda Más” unveiled vulnerability with tear-inducing sincerity. Her versatility dazzles at every turn: “Bidi Bidi Bom Bom” channels infectious joy with its playful bop, while “Techno Cumbia” broke ground with its innovative fusion, which still influences Latin music mash-ups.
Every track bursts with identity and hooks — “El Chico del Apartamento 512” is as mischievously delightful as “Si Una Vez” is powerfully defiant. Surging to No. 29 on the Billboard 200 and dominating the Top Latin Albums chart for 20 weeks, her fourth studio album shattered barriers for Spanish-language music, securing Selena’s eternal legacy far beyond Tejano or pop.