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A year later, Y Sigue La Mata Dando was released and in 2006. [ clarification needed ] The group fractured that same year with several members, including vocalist Alfredo Ramírez Corral, breaking away to form their own group, Los Creadorez del Pasito Duranguense de Alfredo Ramírez .
De colores" ([Made] of Colors) is a traditional Spanish language folk song that is well known throughout the Spanish-speaking world. [1] It is widely used in the Catholic Cursillo movement and related communities such as the Great Banquet, Chrysalis Flight, Tres Días , Walk to Emmaus , and Kairos Prison Ministry .
El Gato Negro" (The Black Cat) is a very popular corrido whose words and music were written by Salomé Gutiérrez, R. and published by San Antonio Music Publishers, Inc., In 1987 it was performed by Tejano music singer Ruben Ramos and his band The Mexican Revolution .
[12] [13] Elías had previous voice-acting experience prior to Charro Negro, including that of the Spanish-dubbing versions of Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs and its sequel both produced by Sony Pictures Animation. [12] Elías said his voice work experience in Charro Negro is "different" from his dubbing roles Meatballs films. "It was very ...
Strange Pilgrims (Spanish: Doce cuentos peregrinos, lit. 'Twelve Pilgrim Stories') is a collection of twelve loosely related short stories by the Nobel Prize–winning Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez. Not published until 1992, the stories that make up this collection were originally written during the seventies and eighties.
The song "La Llorona" is featured in the 2017 Disney-Pixar film Coco; it is performed by Alanna Ubach as Imelda Rivera and Antonio Sol in a guest appearance as Ernesto de la Cruz in the English version and Angelica Vale and Marco Antonio Solis in the Spanish version. In the film, Imelda sings the song during the sunrise concert as she attempts ...
The first edition was illustrated by Raymond Lufkin and published in 1948 by Knopf. [4] Of the first edition Bontemps related "I would have given my eye teeth to know when I was a high school boy in California—the story that my history books barely mentioned(...)I tried to make clear how American slavery came about and what causes lay behind the present attitudes toward Negroes on the part ...
El Negro Zumbón" (also known as "Anna") is a baião song written by Armando Trovajoli [1] [2] in 1951 for the film Anna, directed by Alberto Lattuada and starring Silvana Mangano. [ 3 ] In the movie, the song is performed in a night club scene by Mangano, though she is lip-syncing; the lyrics are actually sung by Flo Sandon's .