Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Los Donneños were a 1950s Mexican Norteño duo formed by Ramiro Cavazos and Mario Montes and named after Donna, Texas. [1] Ramiro Cavazos was the lead singer and played the bajo sexto, while Mario Montes was second voice and played the accordion. On some recordings they were joined by a string bass player, Rafael Gaspar.
Flip Records was an American record label that flourished in the 1950s, releasing rhythm and blues and doo-wop music by such artists as Richard Berry, The Six Teens, Donald Wood, the Elgins, and many others. Max and Lilian Feirtag operated the label in Los Angeles, California, and published music under the Limax Music trademark.
"Baile Inolvidable" features dialogue by Jacobo Morales, excerpted from the Debí Tirar Más Fotos short film. ^[c] "Weltita" contains an interpolation of "La Flaca", written by Pau Donés, and performed by Jarabe de Palo. ^[d] "Veldá" features additional vocals by Wisin and contains a sample of "No Voy a Esperar por Ti", as performed by Plan ...
The film is loosely based on the 1974 novel Los Andes no creen en Dios by Adolfo Costa du Rels and two short stories by the same author, La Misk'isimi (Sweet Lips in Quechua) and Plata del diablo (The Devil's Silver).
"Cantaloop (Flip Fantasia)" is a song by British jazz-rap group Us3, originally released in October 1992 by Blue Note Records as the lead single from the group's debut album, Hand On the Torch (1993). The song was recorded as a demo a year before the group's first release and features a sample of Herbie Hancock's song "Cantaloupe Island".
Dios Nunca Muere" (English: God Never Dies) is a Mexican waltz written by composer and violinist Macedonio Alcalá in 1868. Is the de facto anthem of the state of Oaxaca . [ 1 ] " Dios Nunca Muere " has been sung by famous singers like Pedro Infante and Javier Solís .
Wesley Eric Weston Jr. [1] [2] (born 3 March 1981), [1] better known by his stage name Lil' Flip, is an American rapper. Raised in Houston , Texas, he began his musical career as a freestyle and battle rapper before signing with the local record label Suckafree Records in 1999.
"Gracias a Dios" (English: "Thanks God") is a song written by Mexican singer-songwriter Juan Gabriel and recorded by Thalía. It was released as the fifth [ 1 ] single from Thalía's fourth studio album En éxtasis (1995).