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Yolanda del Rio interviewed by Dulce Osuna in 2016 Yolanda del Río (born Yolanda Jaen López on May 27, 1955, in Ixmiquilpan , Hidalgo ) is a Mexican film actress and ranchera singer. Some of her best-known films are Caminos de Michoacán (1979) and La India blanca (1982).
This is a list of singer-songwriters who write, compose, and perform their own musical material. The list is divided into two sections to differentiate between artists categorized as singer-songwriters and others who do not fall under the definition associated with the genre: Traditional singer-songwriters; Others who both write songs and sing
The song was recorded by The Andrews Sisters on January 7, 1941. [1] Jane Withers mimicks Miranda's performance in the 1941 film Small Town Deb. The 1943 Our Gang comedy Calling All Kids included a performance of this song by Janet Burston, who was impersonating Carmen Miranda. In 1944, Carmen Miranda reprised the song for the film Four Jills ...
You Can Play These Songs with Chords is an early (1996–97) demo from the rock band Death Cab for Cutie, which at the time consisted entirely of founder Ben Gibbard. This demo was originally released on cassette by Elsinor Records.
The mezzo-soprano is the middle female voice and the most common of the female singing voices, which tends to dominate in non-classical music, with vocal range that typically lies between the A below "middle C" (C 4) to the A two octaves above (i.e. A 3 –A 5).
"Sugar Loaf Samba" by Stanley Black<--this is an orchestrated, piano-based Samba that has no words --> "Sugar Loaf Sunrise" by Wade Marcus "Suiça Carioca" by Azymuth "Summer Nights in Rio" by Wilton Felder "Swingin' Down To Rio" by Charlie Barnet "Take You to Rio", by Justin Bieber, from the animated film Rio "Tango del Rio" by Thierry Lang
"Ramona" is a 1928 song with lyrics by L. Wolfe Gilbert and music by Mabel Wayne. Composed for the 1928 feature film Ramona, it was the first theme song written for the movies. [3] The original lyrics and music of the song entered the public domain in the United States in 2024. [4]
The lyrics in this version differ slightly from those in the movie. On the record, Eberly sings "And I've seen toasts to Tangerine / Raised in every bar across the Argentine," [1] the lyric that became standard. In the movie at that point, the line is "And I've seen times when Tangerine / Had the bourgeoisie believing she were queen."