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"El Amor de Mi Vida" (English: "The Love of My Life") is the second single from Ricky Martin's debut solo album Ricky Martin. It was released on February 25, 1992. A music video was also released. The song reached number eight on the Hot Latin Songs in the United States.
All lyrics are written by Pablo Milanés. No. Title Originally released on Length; 1. "El Amor de Mi Vida" New song: 4:37: 2. "Mírame Bien" Yo Me Quedo (1982) 3:56: ...
"ADMV" (short for "Amor de Mi Vida"; English: "Love of My Life") [1] is a song by Colombian singer Maluma. Co-written by Maluma, Stiven Rojas, Vicente Barco, and Edgar Barrera, the lattermost of whom also produced the song, it was released by Sony Music Latin on April 23, 2020. The song topped the charts in Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala ...
El Amor de Mi Vida may refer to: "El Amor de Mi Vida" (song), a 1992 song by Ricky Martin; El Amor de Mi Vida, a 2006 album by Ronnie Drew and Eleanor Shanley;
"L'Amour de Ma Vie" is a two-part song, consisting of "L'Amour de Ma Vie" and "Over Now" collectively running for a length of over five minutes. [ 2 ] [ 8 ] It starts as a retro and bossa nova -influenced side, where she reminisces on the past relationship, before segueing into an electronic part with an ad-libbed lyrics focusing on a positive ...
El Amor De Mi Vida is a 2006 album by Ronnie Drew and Eleanor Shanley, featuring traditional songs as well as compositions by Warren Zevon (author of the title song), Nick Cave, Bob Dylan, Tom Waits and Paul Brady.
"L'Amour de ma vie" ("The Love of My Life"), a song by Sherisse Laurence, Luxembourg's entry in the 1986 Eurovision Song Contest "L'Amour de Ma Vie", a song by Billie Eilish from Hit Me Hard and Soft (2024) El Amor de Mi Vida (disambiguation) (The Love of My Life) "(Not) The Love of My Life", a 2019 song by Yuna
Amor, vida de mi vida (Love, life of my life) is an aria for baritone from the zarzuela Maravilla composed by Federico Moreno Torroba to a libretto by Antonio Quintero and Jesús María de Arozamena. [1] It premiered in Madrid in 1941, where the aria was sung by the baritone, Luis Sagi-Vela.