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"La Noche" (translation "the night") is a salsa song written and performed by the Colombian singer Joe Arroyo. [1] Billboard called it a "groundbreaking song" that made Arroyo "a groundbreaking force in Colombian salsa."
"Desde Esa Noche" is a Latin pop and reggaeton song, with banda and norteño influences, as well as mariachi horns and cumbian accordion. It has received mostly positive reviews and has become a commercial success all over Latin America and the United States, where it peaked at number 16 on the Hot Latin Songs chart and number 4 on the Latin ...
"La Media Vuelta" ("The Turn Around") is a song written and performed by Mexican singer José Alfredo Jiménez released in 1963. [1] One of Jiménez' most famous compositions, the song has become part of the traditional Mexican musical repertoire, and has been recorded by dozens of singers and groups.
"La Media Noche" – United States Marine Band [6] "The Mocking Bird" – John York AtLee and Fred Gaisberg "Semper Fidelis" – United States Marine Band "The Song That Reached My Heart" – Duffy & Imgrund's Fifth Regiment Band [7] "Third verse of Mary & John, The Lover's Quarrel" – Will White [8] "The Thunderer" – United States Marine Band
Loalwa Braz Vieira (3 June 1953 [citation needed] – 19 January 2017) was a Brazilian [1] singer, best known for providing the lead vocals for the French-Brazilian recording act Kaoma for their 1989 cover of the hit "Llorando se fue" (by Ulysses Hermosa, lead singer of the popular Bolivian folk group Los Kjarkas), later renamed as "Lambada". [1]
The song "Un millón de muertos" ("A million dead") after being altered and presented as "Un millón de sueños" ("A million dreams") was not approved to be played on the radio ("No radiable"). Cecilia 2 was the name that replaced "Me quedaré soltera" ("I will remain single") as the album title due to the feminism behind that statement.
"Ritmo de la noche" (Rhythm of the Night) is a song written by AC Beat, Lagonda, Castioni, and Wycombe, and originally recorded by German house group Chocolate in 1990. It was covered and released in the same year by Mystic, The Sacados, Lorca, and ten other producers.
The album made the U.S. Latin Albums Top 10 and Fey also had all four of her singles chart within the Latin Tracks Top 20 (Azucar Amargo #8, Muevelo #9, Las Lagrimas de mi Almohada #13 and Subidon #20). It won the Pop Album of the Year at the 1998 Latin Billboard Music Awards. Tierna la Noche has sold more than 4,000,000 copies worldwide.