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  2. Rolling Stone Argentina ' s The 100 Greatest Albums of ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolling_Stone_Argentina's...

    Magazine cover of the first edition of Rolling Stone Argentina ' s "The 100 Greatest Albums of National Rock".. The 100 Greatest Albums of National Rock (Spanish: Los 100 mejores discos del rock nacional) is a 2007 special issue of Rolling Stone Argentina, the local edition of the American magazine that is published monthly by S.A. La Nación.

  3. Bolero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolero

    This flexibility has enabled boleros to feature in the repertoire of Cuban son and rumba ensembles, as well as Spanish copla and flamenco singers, since the early 20th century. Occasionally, boleros have been merged with other forms to yield new subgenres, such as the bolero-son, popular in the 1930s and 1940s, and the bolero-cha, popular in ...

  4. List of Rolling Stone Brasil 100 Greatest Brazilian Music ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Rolling_Stone...

    The choice of the "100 greatest" was based on the sum of votes of 60 scholars, producers and Brazilian music journalists. Each of the voters chose 20 albums, in no order of preference, which according to Rolling Stone, should be based on criteria like "intrinsical artistic value and historical importance, that is, how much the album influenced other artists."

  5. Dos gardenias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dos_gardenias

    "Dos gardenias" is a bolero written in 1945 by Cuban composer and pianist Isolina Carrillo. [2] Widely considered a standard of the Latin music repertoire, the song became a hit for Daniel Santos in 1948, due to his recording with La Sonora Matancera with an arrangement by Pérez Prado.

  6. Mis Boleros Favoritos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mis_Boleros_Favoritos

    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".

  7. Los Panchos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Panchos

    By 1946, the trio's exceptional virtuosity and authenticity had attracted the attention of Edmund Chester at CBS Radio's Cadena de Las Americas (Network of the Americas). [6] [7] Los Panchos were immediately invited to perform as "musical ambassadors" on the network's Viva América program to support cultural diplomacy in twenty countries throughout Latin America and South America.

  8. Trío romántico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trío_romántico

    Trío Los Panchos, one of the most successful Mexican tríos of all time.. A trío romántico is a group of vocalists-guitarists, with origins in Mexico and other places in Hispanic America, that performs romantic songs, based on rhythms like bolero, vals and pasillo, mostly.

  9. Lucho Gatica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucho_Gatica

    Lucho Gatica was born in Rancagua.He attended school at the Instituto O'Higgins.He and his brother Arturo were struggling singers before they released their first album in 1949, when Gatica was 21 years old.