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"Ese Hombre" (English: "That Man") is a song written by Ana Magdalena and Manuel Alejandro and performed by Spanish recording artist Rocío Jurado for her studio album Señora (1979). It was released by RCA Records as a B-side to "Señora" in 1980.
"Ese Hombre" (English: "That Man") is a song written by María Angélica Ramírez and first performed by Puerto Rican singer Nydia Caro on her album Unicornio Azul (1983). [1] It was later covered by Chilean singer Myriam Hernández on her album Myriam Hernández IV in 1994. [ 2 ]
"Por Ese Hombre" (For That Man) is a song originally recorded by Argentine duo Pimpinela and Spanish singer Dyango for the former's fifth studio album, Lucía y Joaquín (1985). It was covered by American singer Brenda K. Starr and Puerto Rican-American singer-songwriters Tito Nieves and Víctor Manuelle , as the lead single for Starr's seventh ...
"Ese Hombre" (Nydia Caro song), 1983 song, also covered by Myriam Hernández in 1994; Por Ese Hombre, 1988 album by Charytín Goyco "Por Ese Hombre", 1993 song by Pimpinela, covered by Brenda K. Starr, Tito Nieves, and Victor Manuelle in 2002 "Quitame Ese Hombre", a 2002 song by Pilar Montenegro from the album Deahogo
Two tracks on this album, "Ay Amor" (Oh My Love) and "El Hombre que Yo Amo" (The Man I Love), spent months at the top of music charts in Latin America and the U.S. [6] In February 1989 she was a guest artist and jury member at the Festival de Viña del Mar.
el hacha (afilada) = "the (sharp) axe" el aula (vieja) = "the (old) classroom" La is used, however, when el would imply a masculine noun: la ácrata (because el ácrata would be a male anarchist) la árabe (because el árabe would be a male Arab, or the Arabic language) Feminine el is never used, however, before feminine adjectives that begin ...
Franco, ese hombre, translated into English as Franco, this man, is a 1964 documentary film by Spanish director José Luis Sáenz de Heredia. It follows the military and political career of the Spanish Head of State Francisco Franco until the 25th anniversary of the end of the Civil War .
In 2004, La Factoría launched Más Allá, and the songs “No Lastimes Más” and “Ese Hombre es Mío” became huge hits in Latin America. Two years later, DJ Pablito and MC Joe left the group. That same year La Factoría released Nuevas Metas.