Like Brown's previous albums, it features songs inspired in poems by Luis Palés Matos ("Pueblo negro") and Juan Antonio Corretjer ("Inabón Yunes").
The album also features Brown's second adaptation of a Luis Palés Matos poem in "Ohé Nené".
Jorge Luis Borges | Luis Miguel | Luis Buñuel | C.D. Luis Ángel Firpo | Tomás Luis de Victoria | San Luis Potosí | San Luis | San Luis Obispo, California | Luis Ángel Firpo | Luis | San Luis, Argentina | José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero | Luis Muñoz Marín | Luís Figo | Luis Suárez | Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport | Luis Fortuño | Luis Brandoni | Juan Luis Guerra | San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí | San Luis Obispo | Luis Manzano | Luís de Camões | José Luis Chilavert | The Bridge of San Luis Rey | San Luis Obispo County | Luis Fonsi | Luis Enrique | Luis Alandy | São Luís, Maranhão |
Among the more prominent journalist with El Imparcial were Luis Pales Matos, Angel Rivero Mendez, Hector Campos Parsi, Rafael Pont Flores, and Luis Rechani Agrait.
His work is most often viewed as an essential representation of Afro-Antillean or Afro-Caribbean poetry, known alternatively as negrismo or poesia negra in Spanish, along with the works of Cuban Nicolás Guillén and Puerto Rican Luis Palés Matos.