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Los Ángeles were a Spanish pop group active 1963-1976. [1] Originally the band was known as Los Ángeles Azules (The Blue Angels), the "Azules" was dropped when contracted by Hispavox, a major Spanish label, in 1967. On September 26, 1976, the band were on their way to Madrid after playing in Tarragona the previous day.
Los Ángeles Azules are a Mexican musical group that plays the cumbia sonidera genre, which is a cumbia subgenre using the accordion and synthesizers. This results in a fusion of the sounds of cumbia from the 1950-1970s with those of 1990s-style electronic music.
Los Angeles de Charly is a Mexican cumbia group led by vocalist Carlos Becies. The group was formed in 1999, after Charly Becies and fellow vocalists Guillermo "Memo" Palafox and Jonathan Martínez left the popular group Los Ángeles Azules and became one of leading exporters of the romantic Mexican cumbia genre.
Las 30 Cumbias Más Pegadas (English: The 30 Best Cumbias) is a compilation album featuring music from Los Angeles Azules, Los Askis, Rayito Colombiano, Grupo Latino, Grupo Maracuya, Los Llayras, Mr. Chivo, Aniceto Molina, Super Grupo G, La Tropa Vallenata, Los Vallenatos, Yahari, among others.
Los Ángeles Negros played during the following years with the Argentine singer Oscar Antonio Seín and Enrique Castillo, Mickey Alarcón and Guillermo Lynch from Chile, releasing the albums Despacito, Bolerísimo, an instrumental one (all three from 1976), Serenata Sin Luna (1977), Pasión y Vida (1978), Será Varón, Será Mujer (1979), and ...
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"Loco Enamorado" (English: "Crazy Lover") is a song recorded by Spanish singer Abraham Mateo and Puerto Rican singers Farruko and Christian Daniel. It was originally released on June 23, 2017, through Sony Music , as the lead single from Mateo's fifth studio album , A Cámara Lenta .
"Como Fui a Enamorarme de Ti" was released as the second single from Y Para Siempre (1989), a studio album released by Los Bukis. The song lyrics, about an unrequited love, were also the basis for the script of the film of the same name, directed by Sergio Olhovich and released in Mexico on May 21, 1991. [ 2 ]