Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ritmo! is a cumbia album from the Colombian musical group Sonora Dinamita.It was released on the Discos Fuentes label.. The album has been described as "a fundamental pillar in the development and dissemination of Colombian cumbia."
La Sonora Dinamita is a Colombian [1] and Mexican [2] [3] [4] musical group that plays cumbia, a Tropical music genre from Colombia but popular throughout Latin America. As one of the first cumbia groups to reach international success, it is credited with helping to popularize the genre throughout Latin America and the world.
Sexteto Miramar, Rodolfo y su Tipica RA7, Los Hispanos, Los Ídolos, Los Bestiales, Grupo Monteadentro, La Sonora Dinamita Musical artist Marco Tulio Aicardi Rivera (23 May 1946 – 24 October 2007), better known by the name Rodolfo , was a Colombian singer of tropical music who was active from the 1960s until his death.
One week after suffering a medical emergency during a sermon, Bishop T.D. Jakes offered an update on his health in a video message to church members. In the message to members of the megachurch ...
Many artists had covered the song include Carlos Vives, Grupo Niche, Ray Conniff, Gran Pachanga, Los Joao, La Sonora Dinamita, Julio Iglesias, Tulio Zuloaga, and Alfredo Gutiérrez. The title of the song alludes metaphorically to the weather phenomenon, in which a cold front clashes with warm air, producing heavy storms and torrential rains ...
Itzel began her acting career at age 5 on the 1997 Mexican telenovela El privilegio de amar, [1] where she played Dulce. [3] Two years later she entered at the Centro de Educación Artística of Televisa, [1] two months after joining the Televisa academy, Nicandro Díaz chose her to be part of the telenovela Carita de ángel, where she played Chabelita Pérez. [1]
Angel Baillo (bass) and Jorge Corrales (keyboards) formed the group after playing together in a local rock band. They began as a project called Vodkatronik, experimenting with a mix of eighties music and electronic beats.
The song "Que nadie sepa mi sufrir", was composed in 1936 by Ángel Cabral, with Spanish lyrics by Enrique Dizeo, both of Argentine origin, as a Peruvian waltz.Peruvian waltz, also known as vals criollo ("creole waltz"), was a popular genre in Hispanic America between the 1930s and 1950s, and the song, initially covered by Argentine singer Hugo del Carril, became a regional hit.