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The video for Estamos Bien was released on June 28, 2018 on Bad Bunny's YouTube channel. By April 2019, the music video for the song had received over 300 million views. [ 6 ] In the video, Bad Bunny is seen enjoying his time with friends and paints his fingernails purple and blows them dry, questioning traditional male expectations.
Fluctuating between Los Angeles and Puerto Rico, he has been "experimenting with a new musical mood", citing music of the 1970s across genres "in both Spanish and English" as his main influences. The artist also promised the next album, set to be his most personal yet, to not sound like its predecessor, as he is "always going to look for a way ...
"No Me Acuerdo" (I Don't Remember) is a song by Mexican singer Thalía and Dominican singer Natti Natasha. It was released on June 1, 2018 as the lead single from Thalía's fifteenth studio album, Valiente (2018).
YHLQMDLG (acronym for "Yo Hago Lo Que Me Da La Gana", transl. I Do Whatever I Want) [2] is the second solo studio album and third overall by Puerto Rican rapper and singer Bad Bunny.
"No Tengo Dinero" (in English: "I Don't Have Money") is a song by Mexican singer-songwriter Juan Gabriel, released in 1971 on his debut studio album, El Alma Joven. The song is an original composition by Gabriel. The title track was released as a single in 1971 and is Gabriel's debut single.
A Spanish language pop ballad, it is a heartbreak song, describing what happens when you miss someone with whom you still hope to return one day, and the vulnerability of a heart that resists having to accept reality. "A Veces Bien y a Veces Mal" received widely positive reviews from music critics, who complimented its
The song was a radio hit and was a constant airplay gainer. "Gracias a Dios" was a chart topper in many countries, specially in Central and South America, Spain and the Philippines. It was also recorded in an English version, titled "I Found Your Love". It was included in her Philippine album Nandito Ako (1997).
The lyric of the song had to undergo some changes, not only because it was a woman who was performing it this time, but also because its author had used some expressions which are typical of the Argentinean Spanish (such as "vos", a way of addressing someone), and referred expressly to Buenos Aires (one of the original verses goes: "estoy ...