Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Talk: Que Seas Feliz. Add languages. ... Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ...
Pages for logged out editors learn more. ... Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... "Para Que Seas Feliz" 04:52: 7. "Tu Compañero"
Velázquez with Pedro Vargas, c. 1950 s. Consuelo Velázquez Torres (August 21, 1916, in Ciudad Guzmán, Jalisco – January 22, 2005, [1] Mexico City), also popularly known as Consuelito Velázquez, [2] was a Mexican concert pianist and composer.
Que Seas Muy Feliz ("May you be very happy") is the fourth album recorded by the Mexican singer Alejandro Fernández.It was produced by Pedro Ramírez. The song "Como Quien Pierde Una Estrella" was the most popular song of its time, with radio stations playing it with an unusual frequency, turning it into a new anthem for the genre.
For this album, Patti Pravo collaborates with singer and composer Léo Ferré, with whom she records Italian cover versions of famous songs: "Piccino" (the original "Petite") and "Col tempo" ("Avec le temps"), Ferré himself performs two instrumental compositions on the album called "La solitudine", opening and closing the record.
The 46 lyrics of the songs were taken from an anthology of Italian poems by Paul Heyse (1830–1914), translated into German and published with the title of Italienisches Liederbuch in 1860. [3] Despite Heyse’s diverse poetic selections, Wolf preferred the rispetto , a short Italian verse usually consisting of eight lines of ten or eleven ...
Grandes Éxitos (English: "Greatest Hits") is a greatest hits album by Mexican singer Luis Miguel.Released on 22 November 2005 by Warner Music Latina, the album features 24 previously recorded songs from Miguel's career with his record label as well as two new songs ("Misterios del Amor" and "Si Te Perdiera"); both songs were released as singles from the album.
"Marrakesh" is the Italian version of the 1975 song "Qualquer coisa" by Caetano Veloso. [6] The songs "Il cigno dell'amore" and "Senza fiato" were covered by Turkish singer Ajda Pekkan (respectively as "Son Yolcu" and "Düşünme Hiç" in Turkish) for her album Süperstar '83 (1983).