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The song "La Llorona" is featured in the 2017 Disney-Pixar film Coco; it is performed by Alanna Ubach as Imelda Rivera and Antonio Sol in a guest appearance as Ernesto de la Cruz in the English version and Angelica Vale and Marco Antonio Solis in the Spanish version. In the film, Imelda sings the song during the sunrise concert as she attempts ...
Amor (Great Love Songs in Spanish) is an album by Eydie Gorme & The Trio Los Panchos. It was produced by Pete Rosaly and released in 1964 on the Columbia Records label. The album spent 22 weeks on the charts and included the hit single "Sabor a Mi". It was the best-selling album in Gorme's career. [1] [2]
"Historia de un Amor" (Spanish for "Love Story") is a song about a man's old love written by Panamanian songwriter Carlos Eleta Almarán. It was written after the death of his brother's wife. It is also part of the soundtrack of a 1956 Mexican film of the same name starring Libertad Lamarque. The song tells of a man's suffering after his love ...
"Dile Al Amor" (English: Tell to the Love) is Aventura's fourth single from their fifth and final studio album The Last (2009). This was the second song from Aventura to reach number-one on Hot Latin Tracks.
In 1978, the German Schlager singer Bata Illic released a German version with lyrics by Michael Marian. [6] In 2001, Luis Miguel covered the song, which was released as the lead single from his album Mis Romances (2001). The song peaked at number 13 on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart. [7]
"Historia de un amor" Carlos Eleta Almarán: 3:54: 7. "Luna nascosta" (Love Theme from the Movie Hidden Moon) Luis Bacalov, Humberto Gatica, Massimo Guantini, Tony Renis 8. "Il canto" (feat. Plácido Domingo) Luca Barbarossa, Romano Musumarra: 4:28: 9. "We Are Love" Edgar Cortázar, Mark Portmann: 4:30: 10. "Così" (feat. Eros Ramazzotti) Luca ...
The song is also considered one of Mina's signature song. [2] Mina recorded a Spanish version of the song called "Amor mío" for the Latin American music market. The b-side of the single was a cover version of the song "I'll Be Home", in Italian called "Capirò", and composed by Randy Newman. The author of the adapted lyrics was Franca Evangelisti.
The song debuted on the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks chart at number 35 on 21 November 1987 and climbed to the top ten four weeks later. [5] [6] It reached the top position of the chart on 23 January 1988, replacing "Soy Así" by Mexican singer José José and being replaced twelve weeks later by Juan Gabriel's "Debo Hacerlo". [7] "¡Ay, amor!"