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"Corrido de la Cucaracha", lithograph (published in 1915) by Antonio Vanegas Arroyo La Cucaracha ("The Cockroach") is a popular folk song about a cockroach who cannot walk. The song's origins are Spanish, [1] but it became popular in the 1910s during the Mexican Revolution. [2]
The title song of the film used the same melody as Esperón's song "Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!", [14] [15] with new English lyrics written for it by Ray Gilbert. [16] While these English lyrics were not a translation of Ernesto Cortázar's Spanish lyrics nor were they similar to them in any way, the chorus of "Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!"
"Cosas de la Peda" (transl. "Drunk Things") is a song by Dominican-American singer Prince Royce featuring Mexican singer-songwriter Gabito Ballesteros. [1] It was released on January 16, 2024, through Sony Music Latin and Smiling Prince Music, Inc., as the seventh and lead single for Royce's seventh studio album, Llamada Perdida (2024).
Spanish: despues de beber cada uno dice su parecer, ' after drinking everyone speaks their opinion '; cuando el vino entra, echa el secreto afuera, ' when the wine enters, it throws the secret out '; and los niños y los borrachos dicen la verdad, ' children and drunk people speak the truth '.
He proceeded, according to the political memoirs of his contemporaries, in 1923 to re-translate the lyrics from the original French at the organ in his cousin's home in Beijing, publishing them in New Youth, a journal of which he was the editor-in-chief. [53]
Travis Kelce channeled his inner Garth Brooks with a drunk version of “Friends in Low Places” on stage at the team’s Super Bowl LVIII victory parade on Wednesday, February 14. “If you know ...
LibriVox reading in French. Le Bateau ivre (The Drunken Boat) is a Symbolist poem written in the summer of 1871 by French poet Arthur Rimbaud, then aged sixteen.The poem, one-hundred lines long, with four alexandrines per each of its twenty-five quatrains, describes the drifting and sinking of a boat lost at sea in a fragmented first-person narrative saturated with vivid imagery and symbolism. [1]
"Clavado en un Bar" (English: "Stuck in a Bar") is a song by Mexican band Maná from their fifth studio album, Sueños Líquidos (1997). The song was written by the band's lead vocalist Fher Olvera, who handled the production alongside drummer Alex González and Benny Faccone.