Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Mi Amor Por Ti" (My Love for You) is a single by Salvadoran singer Álvaro Torres and Mexican singer Marisela, released on 1985 through Fonovisa Records as part of Torres' seventh studio album Tres. The song was written by Torres, produced by Enrique Elizondo and it was recorded in George Tobin Studios, North Hollywood, CA .
It was acknowledged as an award-winning song at the 1995 BMI Latin Awards. [12] Commercially, the single topped the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart in the US, making it her fourth number one on the chart. [13] Lannert described "Mi Buen Amor" as one of the songs that made Estéfano a prominent figure in Latin music. [14]
It was released as the fourth single released from her first Spanish album, Mi Tierra. The song saw a UK release only as "Mi Buen Amor" and "¡Sí Señor!..." were released simultaneously as the album's fourth single in Latin America and Europe respectively. In the UK, it was released in December 1993 as a Limited Edition CD maxi and 7" vinyl.
"Meu amor é..." was composed by Naoya Matsuoka, a Japanese Latin fusion musician and jazz pianist. The title is Brazilian Portuguese for "My love is...". In addition, the single jacket cover uses the title "Mi Amore", as the song was originally titled with the Spanish word "Mi" and the Italian word "Amore".
Many of their other songs contain some lines in Latin, have a Latin name and/or are supported by a choir singing in Latin. Rhapsody of Fire – Ira Tenax; Rotting Christ: Sanctus Diavolos: Visions of a Blind Order, Sanctimonius, Sanctus Diavolos; Theogonia: Gaia Telus, Rege Diabolicus; Κατά τον δαίμονα εαυτού: Grandis ...
Amore is the Italian word for "love". It may come from Amare which is "to love" in Latin. People ... Mi amor (disambiguation) Mi amore (disambiguation) ...
amor fati: love of fate: Nietzscheian alternative worldview to that represented through memento mori ("remember you must die"): Nietzsche believed amor fati was more affirmative of life. amor omnibus idem: love is the same for all: From Virgil, Georgics III amor patriae: love of the fatherland: i.e., "love of the nation;" patriotism: amor ...
Amor" ended 1996 as the second-best performing Latin song of the year in the country behind "Un Millón de Rosas" by La Mafia. [16] The track also topped the Latin Pop Songs chart in the United States. [17] In 2014, it was named the "Best Latin Love Song of All Time" by Judy Cantor-Navas of Billboard magazine. [8]