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"Las Mañanitas" Spanish pronunciation: [las maɲaˈnitas] is a traditional Mexican [1] birthday song written by Mexican composer Alfonso Esparza Oteo.It is popular in Mexico, usually sung early in the morning to awaken the birthday person, and especially as part of the custom of serenading women.
"Cielito Lindo" is a Mexican folk song or copla popularized in 1882 by Mexican author Quirino Mendoza y Cortés (c. 1862 – 1957). [1] It is roughly translated as "Lovely Sweet One". Although the word cielo means "sky" or "heaven", it is also a term of endearment comparable to "sweetheart" or "honey".
"¡Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!" or in English Jalisco, don't back down is a Mexican ranchera song composed by Manuel Esperón with lyrics by Ernesto Cortázar Sr. It was written in 1941 [ 1 ] and featured in the 1941 Mexican film ¡Ay Jalisco, no te rajes! , after which it became an enormous hit in Mexico. [ 2 ]
Hinojosa was the youngest of 13 children. Hinojosa's parents were Mexican immigrants. [3] Known for singing both traditional Mexican folksongs and her own original songs, both in Spanish and English, Hinojosa accompanies herself on guitar, which she plays right-handed although she is naturally lefthanded.
Mexican American girls at a quinceañera celebration in Santa Fe, New Mexico In Mexican and other Latin American cultures, it is customary to celebrate a girl's 15th birthday. In Spanish , the girl celebrating her 15th birthday is called a quinceañera ; in English , primarily in the United States, quinceañera is used to refer to the ...
Cepillín recorded 27 long play albums of children songs, 11 of which went gold. [2] In all they sold more than 25 million copies worldwide. The most popular songs were La feria de Cepillín (Cepillín's Fair), Tomás ("Thomas"), En el bosque de la China (“The little Chinese forrest") and La Gallina Cocoua . [ 2 ]
Cristian Sáinz Castro (born 8 December 1974) is a Mexican pop singer. He is the son of actors Verónica Castro and Manuel "El Loco" Valdés, and nephew of actors Ramón Valdés (known for playing Don Ramón in El Chavo del Ocho) and Germán "Tin-Tan" Valdés.
Lola Beltran at the Olympia (Paris), 1979 Beltrán's grave with wrong birthdate at Church of Our Lady of the Rosary in El Rosario, Sinaloa. On March 24, 1996, soon after recording Disco del Siglo (English: Album of the Century) with Lucha Villa and Amalia Mendoza "La Tariácuri" and produced by Juan Gabriel, Beltrán died of a pulmonary embolism [5] at Hospital Ángeles in Mexico City.