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He was the first to die of the "Tres Gallos Mexicanos", or "Three Mexican Roosters" (as he, Pedro Infante and Javier Solís, a younger star, were called; the three died within a span of 13 years). Thousands of fans attended his funeral and followed the hearse to the Panteón Jardín cemetery, where he was buried in the actors' corner. On ...
The following article lists the monthly number-one songs on the Mexican Selecciones Musicales chart from January 1950 to December 1960. The source for these charts is the book Musicosas: manual del comentarista de radio y televisión by Roberto Ayala, who was the director of the Selecciones Musicales magazine.
At age 16, Solis went to Puebla to sing with the Mariachi Metepec, but he did not get his first professional break until two years later when Julito Rodríguez and Alfredo Gil of the famous singing trio, Los Panchos, discovered him and took him to audition at CBS Records. [5] There in 1950, he signed a contract and recorded his first album.
Pedro Infante 6 "Alma de acero" José Alfredo Jiménez: Lola Beltrán / Pedro Infante / Trío Calaveras 7 "Amor mío" Álvaro Carrillo: Lucho Gatica / Los Tres Diamantes: 8 "Angustia" Orlando Brito: Sonora Matancera con Bienvenido Granda: 9 "Vanidad" Armando Gónzález Malibrán: Genaro Salinas / Los Tres Ases 10 "Estoy perdido" Víctor Manuel ...
Pedro Infante in 1949. Pedro Infante was born 18 November 1917 in Mazatlán, Sinaloa, [1] [2] the son of Delfino Infante García (24 December 1880 – 17 March 1955), who played the double bass in a band, and Maria del Refugio Cruz Aranda.
Aida Cuevas ; Aleida Núñez; Alejandra Guzmán; Alessandra Rosaldo; Alicia Villarreal; Alix Bauer; Ally Brooke; Amalia Mendoza; Amanda Miguel; Amparo Ochoa; Ana Bárbara
I Am a Charro of Rancho Grande (Spanish: Soy charro de Rancho Grande) is a 1947 Mexican musical comedy drama film directed by Joaquín Pardavé and starring Sofía Álvarez, Pedro Infante and René Cardona. [1] [2] It was shot at the Azteca Studios in Mexico City. The film's sets were designed by the art director Edward Fitzgerald.
Dios Nunca Muere" has been sung by famous singers like Pedro Infante and Javier Solís. There are two versions of the creation of this waltz. The first says that was composed when Macedonio Alcala and his wife went through a precarious economic situation and also the composer was at risk of dying, then his friend Roberto Maqueo, seeing their ...