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These are the lists of the top 100 songs of 2018 in Mexico according to Monitor Latino. [1] Monitor Latino issued two year-end General charts: one which ranked the songs by their number of Spins (Tocadas) on the Mexican radio, and the other ranked the songs by their estimated audience.
"Shakira: Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 53" [b] is a song by Argentine producer Bizarrap and Colombian singer-songwriter Shakira. It was released on 11 January 2023, through Dale Play Records – part of his popular Bzrp Music Sessions video series.
American record producer and songwriter Édgar Barrera has served as co-writer and co-producer on albums by Karol G, Shakira, Peso Pluma, Ariana Grande, Becky G, Camilo, Carlos Vives, Maluma, Chiquis Rivera, ChocQuibTown, Christian Nodal, and Grupo Frontera.
Sin Bandera is a Mexican romantic ballads duo consisting of Mexican singer-songwriter Leonel Garcia and Argentine singer-songwriter Noel Schajris. They formed in Mexico City in 2000. [ 1 ] They became one of the most popular artists after their eponymous debut studio album Sin Bandera was released on November 20, 2001.
In 1962, five high-school friends from a small town of San Andres, a suburb of Guadalajara, State of Jalisco, Mexico, united their incipient musical skills to form a group called The Freddy Boys that would eventually become one of Mexico's most popular bands and influential in the development of Spanish music across Latin America for the next 30 years.
The lyrics of "De música ligera" are surprisingly short, just seven lines. Their meaning is cryptic and intentionally ambiguous: a love of easy-listening, which Cerati recalls as something finished ("nada más queda" (nothing else remains)), but also as a permanent presence ("nada nos libra" (nothing frees us)).
Para Ti (transl. For You) is the ninth studio album by singer-songwriter Juan Luis Guerra and his band 4.40. It was released on August 31, 2004, by Vene Music and distributed by Universal Latin Music.
Gratis (/ ˈ ɡ r ɑː t ɪ s /) in English is adopted from the various Romance and Germanic languages, ultimately descending from the plural ablative and dative form of the first-declension noun grātia in Latin. It means "free" in the sense that some goods or service is supplied without need for payment, even though it may have value.