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Aguinaldo or Serenal is a music genre used in Parang (Parranda) a type of Christmas music that came to Trinidad and Tobago from Venezuela. Singers and instrumentalists (collectively known as "parranderos") travel from house to house in the community, often joined by friends and neighbours family, using whatever instruments are to hand.
YouTube livestreams. There are several YouTube livestreams that offer 24/7 Christmas music. One of the top livestreamed videos, as of Thursday, was "christmas lofi radio" by Lofi Girl. The video ...
123 Andrés make music for bilingual children and families, as well as for those who are in the process of learning Spanish. Their first album, ¡Uno, Dos Tres Andrés! en español y en inglés, was released in 2015, with 22 educational songs; 11 in Spanish and 11 in English. [7] They were nominated for a Latin Grammy. [8]
Following the release of their self-titled album, the group continued recording new music and released "Yo Te Quiero Más" in November 2018. [15] The release was a collaboration with Colombian singer Mike Bahia. In February 2019 they followed "Yo Te Quiero Mas" with a new single, "Ya Te Perdone", [16] "Andan Diciendo", [17] and "Don Juan."
Cimarron have some guest appearances in other Colombian music records from artists such as Aterciopelados, Carlos Vives and Magín Díaz. In 1996, the band was guest by Aterciopelados to play the harp and cuatro for their song La culpable , written by Andrea Echeverri and Héctor Buitrago , and included in the album La Pipa de la Paz .
A Spanish Colombian is a Colombian of full Spanish descent. Since many of Colombians are of full or partial Spanish descent and their culture is influenced by Spain (Due to the history of Colombia as a Spanish colony) as well as the Colombian government using White Colombian instead of Spanish Colombian, the term is rarely used.
It was selected by Hip Latina in 2017 as one of the "13 Old School Songs Every Colombian Grew Up Listening To"; the publication wrote that the song was "most likely part of any Colombian's perpetual playlist." [3] Viva Music Colombia rated the song No. 50 on its list of the 100 most important Colombian songs of all time. [4]
The Billboard Top Latin Albums chart, published by Billboard magazine, is a record chart that ranks the performance of Latin music albums in the United States. The data is compiled by Nielsen SoundScan from a sample that includes music stores, music departments at electronics and department stores, Internet sales (both physical and digital) and verifiable sales from concert venues in the ...