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Nelson Estupiñán Bass (1912–2002) was an Ecuadorian writer. He was born in Súa, a city in the predominantly Afro-Ecuadorian province of Esmeraldas in Ecuador.He was first homeschooled by his mother before traveling to the capital city of Quito where he graduated from Escuela Superior Juan Montalvo with a degree in public accounting in 1932. [1]
The music video for "Todos los días sale el sol" was directed by Egoi Suso. [11] It was shot in Tarragona, Spain on 20 May 2011 [12] and was released on 23 June 2011. In the video, frontman Uri Giné is shown singing the song as he walks down the street and meets his bandmates.
Madre mía gracias por los días is the debut album by the hardcore band Xibalba, originally released in 2010 by the band itself and Beatdown Hardware Records. Later, re-released on June 21, 2011 by A389 Recordings and Southern Lord Recordings .
"El Son de la Negra" (lit. The Song of the Black Woman) is a Mexican folk song, originally from Tepic, Nayarit, [1] before its separation from the state of Jalisco, and best known from an adaptation by Jalisciense musical composer Blas Galindo in 1940 for his suite Sones de mariachi.
Héctor Juan Pérez Martínez (September 30, 1946 – June 29, 1993), [3] better known as Héctor Lavoe, was a Puerto Rican salsa singer. [4] Lavoe is considered to be possibly the best and most important singer and interpreter in the history of salsa music because he helped to establish the popularity of this musical genre in the decades of 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.
Jo-El Sonnier was born to French-speaking sharecroppers in Rayne, Louisiana, on October 2, 1946. [1] [2] [3] At age three, he began to play his brother's accordion.By age six, Sonnier had performed on the radio; at age 11, he made his first recordings. [4]
"Los caminos", a rumba sung by García and written by Cuban songwriter Pablo Milanés. The album also features two parody songs, " Bolero de Mastropiero " (or merely "Bolero"), originally written by the Argentine musical comedy group Les Luthiers , and " Tango (di Vestimenta Interiore) ", a popular and joking Argetinian tango [ 2 ] in which ...
The composer, guitarist and singer named Luis Díaz Portorreal was born in Bonao, Dominican Republic, on June 21, 1952. Since childhood, he felt a direct impulse to become a musician, given that his father was a Tres player, (an instrument similar to the guitar used in rural Dominican towns), and his mother was a singer of Salves.