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Grandes Éxitos (English: "Greatest Hits") is a greatest hits album by Mexican singer Luis Miguel.Released on 22 November 2005 by Warner Music Latina, the album features 24 previously recorded songs from Miguel's career with his record label as well as two new songs ("Misterios del Amor" and "Si Te Perdiera"); both songs were released as singles from the album.
As her last artistic contribution, she performed piano in the most recent album of the Mexican singer Cecilia Toussaint titled Para mi... Consuelo , which contains songs by Velázquez. In 1977 the concert pianist also received the Award of Peace of the United Nations, together with her colleague the teacher Ramon Inclan Aguilar and the ...
Que Seas Muy Feliz ("May you be very happy") is the fourth album recorded by the Mexican singer Alejandro Fernández.It was produced by Pedro Ramírez. The song "Como Quien Pierde Una Estrella" was the most popular song of its time, with radio stations playing it with an unusual frequency, turning it into a new anthem for the genre.
The 46 lyrics of the songs were taken from an anthology of Italian poems by Paul Heyse (1830–1914), translated into German and published with the title of Italienisches Liederbuch in 1860. [3] Despite Heyse’s diverse poetic selections, Wolf preferred the rispetto , a short Italian verse usually consisting of eight lines of ten or eleven ...
Le cose che vivi and Las cosas que vives (English: The Things You Live) are the fourth studio albums by Italian singer Laura Pausini, released on September 12, 1996 by CGD East West Records. It is Pausini’s first studio album to be recorded and released in both Italian and Spanish simultaneously.
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Vivimi (English: Live through me) is the second single released in February 2005 from Italian singer Laura Pausini's sixth Italian album Resta in ascolto. "Víveme" is the Spanish-language version adapted by Pausini and Badia which was featured as the theme song in the Mexican telenovela La Madrastra.
The song has been recorded in a number of versions. The Italian version performed by Fran Jeffries appears in the film, but not on the soundtrack album.An instrumental that resembles the underscore of Jeffries' version is included on the soundtrack album, as is a group vocal with only vaguely related English lyrics (which can be heard in the film during the fancy-dress ball and costume party ...