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Gloria also debuted in Belgium within the Ultratip Top 10. The video, which is the same as the Spanish version of the song, "Hoy" , was filmed in Peru in the legendary city Machu Picchu . This single became the first single Gloria released as a Digital Download , and the Spanish version topped the Downloads charts in Spain.
hoy por ser tu cumpleaños, te las cantamos a ti. Despierta, mi bien (o nombre), despierta mira que ya amaneció, ya los pajaritos cantan, la luna ya se metió. Qué linda está la mañana, en que vengo a saludarte, Venimos todos con gusto y placer a felicitarte, El día en que tú naciste, nacieron todas las flores, En la pila del bautismo,
Gloria, gloria, corona de la Patria, soberana luz que es oro en tu Pendón. Vida, vida, futuro de la Patria, que en tus ojos es abierto corazón...! Púrpura y oro: bandera inmortal; en tus colores, juntas, carne y alma están. Púrpura y oro: querer y lograr; Tú eres, bandera, el signo del humano afán. España guiadora (Solo) ¡Pide, España!
In the lyrics, Estefan chants: "Con los años que me quedan yo viviré para darte amor borrando cada dolor con besos llenos de pasión como te amé por vez primera." [ 9 ] The album booklet translates it as "With the years that I have left, I will live to give you love, I'll erase every hurt, with kisses filled with passion I'll love you like ...
"Coming Out of the Dark" is a song by Cuban-American singer and songwriter Gloria Estefan. It was released on January 10, 1991, worldwide by Epic Records as the leading and first single from her second album, Into the Light (1991).
"Heaven's What I Feel" is a song recorded by the Cuban-American singer-songwriter Gloria Estefan for her eighth studio album gloria! (1998). The track's lyrics were written by famed Colombian songwriter Kike Santander, who also produced the track with Gloria's husband and longtime collaborator Emilio Estefan.
"Oye Mi Canto (Hear My Voice)" is a song by Cuban-American singer-songwriter Gloria Estefan, released as a single from her debut solo album, Cuts Both Ways (1989). It was the second single in the UK, released on September 4, 1989, and throughout Europe in September and October 1989.
J.D. Considine from The Baltimore Sun felt that "Oye" is "where latin meets disco most effectively." He added, "Basically a sort of techno-salsa fusion, it combines the thumping regularity of electronics with the soulful release of Afro-Cuban rhythm, a combination so potent it makes dancing an almost involuntary response."