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"Bandoleros" is a song by Puerto Rican reggaeton artist Don Omar featuring Puerto Rican artist Tego Calderón. Released in 2005 as the lead single from his compilation album Los Bandoleros, it was also featured in the 2006 film The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift.
"Dale Don Dale" (English: "Hit It Don Hit It") is the track from Don Omar's debut album, The Last Don released in February, 2003. The album version features female reggaeton singer Glory. Being the album's first single, "Dale Don Dale" received massive promotion on radio stations of Puerto Rico.
The music videos for both versions were filmed on January 12, 2010, the Haiti earthquake day, according with Don Omar's Twitter. [7] 2 teasers of the video were posted, the first on August 11, 2010 and the second on September 2, 2010. [8] [9] The music video for the version with Don Omar only, almost a year after the release of the song, was ...
The video sees the group scheming to get Omar his girl back, as it wouldn’t be a Don Omar music video without the added dramatics of a telenovela-inspired plotline. “Llámalo y dile que ahora…
"Ella y Yo" (English: "Her and I") is Aventura's second single from their fourth studio album God's Project and features reggaeton singer Don Omar. The song is also in Don Omar's compilation album, Da Hitman Presents Reggaetón Latino .
A music video directed by long-time Don Omar collaborator Carlos Pérez was released on July 30, 2010 through Omar's Facebook account. [32] "Huérfano De Amor" was released as the second single early 2011, the song features Syko. The music video was premiered on January 4, 2011. [33] It was directed by Alejandro Santiago Ciena.
"El gran varón", (English: The Great Man) also known as « Simón, el gran varón », or Simón is a salsa song written in 1986 by Omar Alfanno and sung by Willie Colón.The song narrates the story of Simón, a trans woman who is rejected by her father for her identity and dies presumably of AIDS, alone in a hospital in New York.
"Taboo" is the second single from Don Omar's collaborative album Meet the Orphans released on January 24, 2011 through Universal Latino. [2] The song is re-adapted version from Los Kjarkas's song "Llorando se fue" most commonly known for its use in Kaoma's 1989 hit single "Lambada" fused with Latin beats. [3]