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"Danza Kuduro" (English: Kuduro Dance) is a Spanish/Portuguese song by Puerto Rican recording artist Don Omar and Portuguese–French singer Lucenzo, from Don Omar's collaborative album Meet the Orphans. The song is an adaptation of Lucenzo's "Vem Dançar Kuduro", a Portuguese/English one.
Both interpretations of kuduro's meaning are incorporated into kuduro dance performances: "In addition to hip hop inspired movements, carnival and traditional Angolan dance steps, both able-bodied Kuduristas and amputees dance on their knees as if their lower legs were amputated, or crawl across the floor in a performance of debility." [10]
Danza Kuduro" was released as the album's lead single on August 15, 2010, it features French singer Lucenzo, who is of Portuguese origin. [31] The song topped on the Billboard Latin Songs , becoming his second number-one single on the chart.
"Vem Dançar Kuduro" (pronounced [vɐ̃j dɐ̃ˈsaɾ kuˈðuɾu], English: Come Dance Kuduro) is a multilingual Portuguese/English/Spanish dance hit single by Lucenzo, a France-based artist of Portuguese origin featuring France-based American artist Big Ali. Lucenzo sings in Portuguese and Big Ali in English and Spanish.
You can be as young as 5, like Aiden Montes Leon, or even over 60, to perform La Danza de los Diablos. “I have children from 3 years old up to the oldest person is about 60 years old.
But it was with his bilingual English/Portuguese dance hit "Vem Dançar Kuduro" [4] in collaboration with Big Ali produced by Lucenzo. It was a Top 40 hit in Switzerland, reaching #31. An alternative Spanish version by Don Omar with Lucenzo was released on 15 August 2010, entitled "Danza Kuduro".
"Bandoleros" is a song by Puerto Rican reggaeton artist Don Omar featuring Puerto Rican artist Tego Calderón. Released in 2005 as the lead single from his compilation album Los Bandoleros, it was also featured in the 2006 film The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift.
"Rabiosa" (English: "Rabid") is a song by Dominican singer El Cata. [1] It achieved mainstream success when Colombian singer Shakira covered it on her ninth studio album Sale el Sol . It was written by Armando Pérez , Edward Bello , and Shakira, and released by Epic Records as the third single from the album, on 8 April 2011.