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The idea for the song came from British music executive Adam Kidron, as a show of support to Hispanic immigrants in the United States. [citation needed] The song is included on the album Somos Americanos; a portion of the profits of which go to the National Capital Immigration Coalition, a Washington, D.C.–based group. [1]
The Spanish version of the video, titled "Dímelo", is exactly the same as the English one except Iglesias mouths the words to the song in Spanish. On the video-sharing website YouTube, Universal Music's upload of the video is the 94th-most-viewed video of all time in the music category. The song peaked for several days at number two on MTV's TRL.
The film remains one of the most famous and successful Spanish films ever made, and one of the first Spanish films to become successful in the U.S.A. Three key scenes of the film were filmed in La Alberca . Its Plaza Mayor serves as a stage for the initial scene, in which the narrator friar, Fernando Rey, goes down to the village to tell the ...
The song also reached number one on the Cash Box chart where it remained at No. 1 for five weeks. [5] The song was ranked the No. 1 top tune of 1953, [6] and the second best selling song of the year. [7] The Les Paul and Mary Ford single reached No. 7 in the UK backed with the Les Paul instrumental composition "Deep in the Blues" as the flip side.
The classic Spanish translation of the Bible is that of Casiodoro de Reina, revised by Cipriano de Valera. It was for the use of the incipient Protestant movement and is widely regarded as the Spanish equivalent of the King James Version. Bible's title-page traced to the Bavarian printer Mattias Apiarius, "the bee-keeper".
"El Triste" ("The Sad One") is a song written by Mexican composer Roberto Cantoral. It was performed for the first time on March 15, 1970, at the "Latin Song Festival II" (predecessor of the OTI Festival) by the Mexican singer José José on YouTube) El Triste was included on his third studio album.
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It is the twenty-first time that a song by Iglesias topped on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs [8] since Gracias a Tí (Remix) featuring Wisin & Yandel in 2009 as well as Juan Luis Guerra's seventh time to reach #1 on Hot Latin Tracks. This is also the third time a self-replacement happened in the history of the Hot Latin Tracks.