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Flor y Canto Segunda Edición is a hymnal which includes 737 hymns and songs in Spanish in a variety of styles, representing music from the Americas, Mexico, Spain, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Puerto Rico. 'Flor y Canto' is Spanish for 'flower and song'. Flor y Canto Segunda Edición was compiled by Rodolfo López. The second edition was ...
Festival de flor y Canto: an anthology of Chicano literature (editor). Los Angeles: University of Southern California Press, 1976. ISBN 0-88474-031-5; Timespace huracan : poems, 1972-1975. Albuquerque, N.M. : Pajarito Publications, 1976. Spik in Glyph?. Houston, Texas: Arte Público Press, 1981. ISBN 0-934770-09-3
Flores de Mayo (Spanish for "flowers of May") is a festival held in the Philippines in the month of May. It is one of the May devotions to the Blessed Virgin Mary and lasts for the entire month.
Flor y Canto, a bilingual hymnal for churches that worship in both English and Spanish. Thánh Ca Dân Chúa, Music to support the rich culture and spiritual heritage of the Vietnamese community. OCP also publishes Respond & Acclaim , a yearly subscription-based psalm resource, which includes a responsorial psalm and a gospel acclamation for ...
Canto (1982) (It/Fr) for Soprano, Tenor, and Ensemble (Text: Dante and anonymous French) Capriccio on the Departure of a Beloved Brother by J.S. Bach (arr. RXR, 1976) for 2, 3 or 4 Guitars; Caprichos (2012) for Piano Solo; Chronies (1981) for Bass Clarinet and Percussion; Cinco Poemas de García Lorca (1975) (Sp) for Mezzo-Soprano, Tenor, and Piano
Flor Y Canto Literary Festival - a three-day literary and cultural festival held in June in celebration of the city’s first Latino poet Laureate, Alejandro Marguia. [13] Fiesta de las Américas - held every September to celebrate culture, arts, and music from the Latino diaspora. [6] Día de Los Muertos - held every November 2. [14]
Flor de las flores, tesoro hermoso de hondos amores. ¡Ay quien pudiera, flor pura, por verte así, así cual tú y gozar! II [ De Manila flor hechicera, de ella encanto y envidia mía, sampaguita feliz que un día ay!, prenda fuiste de mi pasión. Si de dicha y pasión tus hojas marchitarse en su seno visten, juzga cuanto mi pecho triste
Briceida Cuevas, also known as Briceida Cuevas Cob (born Tepakán, Calkiní, Campeche, Mexico, July 12, 1969 [1]) is a Mayan poet. She writes poems about everyday life in Yucatec Maya, many of which have been translated into Spanish, French and English.