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"Todo cambió" by Mexican band Camila (pictured) was the most successful song of the year in Mexico. [20]Monitor Latino began issuing a General chart in 2007. In addition, the "Grupero" chart was renamed as "Regional", an "Inglés" (English) chart was added, and the "Tropical" chart was discontinued.
Musically, "Agua Dulce, Agua Salá" is a rumba flamenca and describes the theme of life, to accept its bitterness and pleasure and to keep on dancing. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] [ 8 ] Colombian vallenato musician Egidio Cuadrado, who is a member of Carlos Vives ' band, plays the accordion for the song. [ 9 ]
"Aquel Nap ZzZz" (transl. "That Nap ZzZz") is a song recorded by Puerto Rican singer Rauw Alejandro.It is the sixth track on his second studio album, Vice Versa (2021), which was released on June 25, 2021.
A new album named "Manzanero Presenta: Las Canciones que Cantaba mi Abuelo", is currently in post-production and will be released in 2020. It comprises 12 of the greatest Jorge Negrete's most remembered radio hits from the 1940s and 1950s, and it is a musical tribute by Armando Manzanero, Rigoberto Alfaro and Lorenzo Negrete himself, to the ...
Agua" has been described as a "1980s-inspired dance" and "disco pop" song with a trap segment during Daddy Yankee's verse and has a length of three minutes and twenty-four seconds. [7] [8] Its love lyrics are performed by Daddy Yankee and Rauw Alejandro, while Nile Rodgers plays "funky" and "groovy" electric guitar riffs during the chorus.
"Al otro lado del río" received the Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 77th Academy Awards, [1] [6] [7] becoming the first Spanish language song, the second in a foreign language, to receive such an honor, and the first by a Uruguayan artist.
Elsewhere in Latin America, "Inolvidable" topped the charts in Colombia; and reached the top-ten in Chile, El Salvador, Panama, Peru and Puerto Rico. A live version of "Inolvidable" was included on the EP América & En Vivo in 1992 and as a part of a medley with the rest of the singles taken from Romance on the live album Vivo (2000).
Originally entitled "Soledad" (Solitude), it was first recorded by Jorge Gallarzo. [3] Over 80 artists have performed the song ever since, including Niño de Murcia (1957), Angelillo (1958), Caterina Valente (1958), José Feliciano (1965), Los Relámpagos (1965), Umberto Marcato (1958), Milton Nascimento (1972), Ney Matogrosso (1975), and Nana ...