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María Guadalupe Palomera Chávez was born in 1913 in La Yesca, Tepic Territory, [5] which later became the State of Nayarit. Her father, Luis Palomera, was the municipal treasurer of La Yesca. [5] Her family later moved to Guadalajara, Jalisco. Palomera made her debut singing on Guadalajara's XED radio station. [4]
Julio Brito [1] [2] was a Cuban musician, composer, orchestra conductor and singer. He achieved great popularity both in his native Cuba and internationally, thanks to compositions such as the guajira "El amor de mi bohío" or the world famous bolero "Mira que eres linda", interpreted by numerous artists around the world, even today.
José Luis Rodríguez was born in Caracas, Venezuela to José Antonio Rodríguez from the Canary Islands, Spain and Ana González a Venezuelan housewife.He lost his father at the age of six, and was raised by his mother (an illiterate then, learned to read as an adult to read the Bible) along with 11 brothers and sisters.
12.578 Vámonos de Fiesta; 12.733 Soñando Boleros; 12.747 La Guillot Interpreta Manzanero; 12.765 12 Éxitos Románticos; 12.773 Mas Romántico; 12.807 El Temperamento de la Guillot; 12.852 Olga de América (1971) 12.876 Única Olga Guillot; With Odeon Records. LDS 2092 Olga Guillot y Las Canciones de Maria Grever; With Orfeon Records
Pepe did this CD as a thank to "las voces más representativas de la época de oro en el género ranchero," such as Jorge Negrete, Pedro Infante, Javier Solis, Miguel Aceves Mejía, and Vicente Fernandez. It was the first CD to record "Lo Mejor De Nosotros," again with unedited songs and making teamwork with Fato.
Segundo Romance comprises 11 cover versions of classic boleros, the oldest dating to 1934. [14] The arrangements consist of strings, saxophone solos, and a piano. [17] Other styles include covers of Carlos Gardel and Alfredo Le Pera's tango "El Día Que Me Quieras", which uses a bandoneon (an accordion from Argentina), and the ranchera-bolero "La Media Vuelta" by José Alfredo Jiménez, which ...
Mis Boleros Favoritos (English: My Favorite Boleros) is a compilation album by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. Released on 8 October 2002 by Warner Music Latina , it contains thirteen previously-recorded songs from the Romance -themed albums as well as a new track "Hasta Que Vuelvas".
Two songs composed by Gutiérrez, "Inolvidable" and "Llanto de Luna" ("Crying Moon"), were highly successful boleros in Latin America. [4] In 1992, a compilation album including an instrumental version of the song performed by Gutiérrez was released. [5] Musically "Inolvidable" is a bolero. [6]