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The Jujuy singer-songwriter of Arab origin Jorge Cafrune in 1978 defied censorship by singing Zamba de mi esperanza at the Cosquín Festival and days later was run over by a Rastrojero (an old pickup truck) that fled, while he was on his way on horseback to Yapeyú to perform a tribute to José de San Martín. There are suspicions that it may ...
The Zamba is a slow dance in three-quarter time played primarily on guitar and bombo legüero. The steps of the dance are a walking step, an alternate step (two steps at one time), and a tip toe alternate step or "sobrepaso punteado" (three steps at one time). The Zamba also requires a handkerchief.
Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act warning This work, which was made after November 1, 1990 and depicts one or more actual human beings engaged in sexually explicit conduct—including but not limited to "lascivious exhibition of the genitals or pubic area of any person" (USC 18 § 2256)—has record-keeping requirements in the United States under the Child Protection and Obscenity ...
The 9th Annual Latin Grammy Awards took place on Thursday, November 13, 2008, at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas and were aired on Univision.The Brazilian Field awards were presented on the same day at the Ibirapuera Auditorium in São Paulo.
MEDLEY, Fla. — More than 3 million viewers tuned into the opening weekend of Unrivaled women’s basketball on cable television, TNT Sports announced Thursday as the new league enters its second ...
A photo outside the Palais de Justice amid Joel Le Scouarnec's 2020 trial. A former surgeon in France is set to go on trial after being accused of raping and assaulting hundreds of minors, many of ...
Esperanza mía is the official soundtrack of the eponymous 2015 Argentine telenovela.The soundtrack was released through Sony Music Entertainment on May 21, 2015. The album debuted and peaked at No. 1 in Argentina [1] and Uruguay [2] and received a platinum certification by Cámara Argentina de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas (CAPIF) for selling 40,000 copies. [3]
The new version featured several Latin American and Hispanic artists: Lali, Coti and Ángela Torres (Argentina); Thalía, Camila's Mario Domm, Sin Bandera's Leonel García, Reik's Jesús Navarro, Río Roma and Carlos Rivera (Mexico); Camilo, Fonseca, Manuel Turizo, Jorge Villamizar and Carlos Vives (Colombia); Pedro Capó, Farruko, Kany García ...