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View a machine-translated version of the Italian article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate , is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
The album's title is the literal Spanish translation of the song's title. Recording sessions for the eight new Spanish tracks took place in January 1980 at Stockholm's Polar Music studios. Swedish/Spanish journalist Ana Martinez del Valle assisted lead vocalists Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad with pronunciation. [3]
1996: Cake covered the English version on their album Fashion Nugget; 2000: Mari Wilson sang it for the titles of the television series Coupling. 2008: Halie Loren released a version on her album They Oughta Write a Song, using the English and Spanish lyrics. 2010: Gaby Moreno released a single simply titled "Quizás."
The Spanish language site is not the only page getting removed by Trump’s team. His administration has also taken down a government website meant to help women find health care and get informed ...
Flash MP3 Player is a web application that allows users to create a music player on their website. It is based on Flash and PHP , but it can be installed without any programming skills. Users are simply required to embed a piece of HTML code into their website and application automatically generates a playlist by scanning a specified folder for ...
"Súbeme la Radio" (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈsuβeme la ˈraðjo]; transl. "Turn Up the Radio for Me") is a song by Spanish singer Enrique Iglesias featuring Cuban singer Descemer Bueno and Puerto Rican reggaeton duo Zion & Lennox. [1] The song was released by RCA Records and Sony Music Latin on 24 February 2017.
In the same year of the release of the Italian single, a Spanish language version was released with the title "A un paso de la luna" for the Hispanic markets. [1] [2] It reached number 4 on the Spanish Singles Chart. Additional lyrics for the Spanish version included Andrés Torres, Jesús Navarro, Julio Ramírez and Bibi Marín. [3]
"Soleado" (Spanish: "Sunny") is a mainly instrumental piece of music composed by Ciro Dammicco under the alias "Zacar", based on his earlier composition "Le rose blu" (1972). The song was recorded in 1974 by Dammico's band, the Daniel Sentacruz Ensemble , [ 1 ] and presented at that year's edition of Festivalbar .