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  2. Los Ángeles Azules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Ángeles_Azules

    Los Ángeles Azules are a Mexican musical group that plays the cumbia sonidera genre, which is a cumbia subgenre using the accordion and synthesizers. This results in a fusion of the sounds of cumbia from the 1950-1970s with those of 1990s-style electronic music.

  3. Los Ángeles de Charly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Ángeles_de_Charly

    Los Angeles de Charly is a Mexican cumbia group led by vocalist Carlos Becies. The group was formed in 1999, after Charly Becies and fellow vocalists Guillermo "Memo" Palafox and Jonathan Martínez left the popular group Los Ángeles Azules and became one of leading exporters of the romantic Mexican cumbia genre.

  4. Perdonarte, ¿Para Qué? - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perdonarte,_¿Para_Qué?

    In 2024, after releasing their twenty-seventh studio album Se Agradece, the Mexican band Los Ángeles Azules signed a musical contract with Virgin Music Group in the United States and its territory Puerto Rico. [1] The album featured a collaboration with Argentine singer María Becerra titled "El Amor de Mi Vida".

  5. MTV (Latin American TV channel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MTV_(Latin_American_TV...

    The channel broadcasts music videos as well as reality shows, TV series and movies, which may be directly or indirectly related to music, aimed at the youth. Its schedule is focused on certain musical genres, mainly pop, rock mix, reggaeton (since 2005), hip hop, trap, electronic music, and K-pop (since 2018). Each of these categories includes ...

  6. Los Ángeles (band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Ángeles_(band)

    Los Ángeles were a Spanish pop group active 1963-1976. [1] Originally the band was known as Los Ángeles Azules (The Blue Angels), the "Azules" was dropped when contracted by Hispavox, a major Spanish label, in 1967. On September 26, 1976, the band were on their way to Madrid after playing in Tarragona the previous day.

  7. Nunca Es Suficiente - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nunca_Es_Suficiente

    A live video of the song was uploaded to YouTube on April 18, 2018. [33] Recorded at Progreso, Yucatán and directed by Diego Álvarez, the video surpassed a billion views in 2020, making Los Ángeles Azules the first Mexican group to achieve that. [24] As of 2023, the video holds over 2 billion views in the platform. [33]

  8. 2002 in Latin music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2002_in_Latin_music

    Los Ángeles Azules: Bailame: Los Tigrillos 8 Un Ramito De Locura: Carmen Linares with Gerardo Núñez Trio 9 A Tiempo: Gian Marco Zignago: Nuevo: Kronos Quartet: 12 Andando de Coletivo: Caju & Castanha 16 Bongó De Van Gogh: Alex Acuña and Justo Almario with Tolú En Concierto: Los Terrícolas: 20 Corazon de Perico: Los Razos de Sacramento 23 ...

  9. Las Estrellas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Las_Estrellas

    XEW-TV's first transmission was a live, play-by-play, outside broadcast of a Mexican League match, with XEW radio veteran Pedro Septién on commentary duties. Other than live sports broadcasts, XEW-TV initially broadcast films from the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, as its studios in Chapultepec 18 were still under construction. The studio ...