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Sin Tu Amor (EP-1972) 1 Sin Tu Amor; 2 Mamá Gorda; 3 Las Nubes Que Pasan (Díselo Tú) 4 Amor de Padres; Sin Tu Amor (1972) 1. Sin Tu Amor; 2. No Me Dejes Amor; 3. El Tiempo; 4. Lo Que Te Puedo Ofrecer; 5. Noches y Días Perdidos; 6. Si Tu Me Dejas; 7. Es Para Tí, Es Para Mí; 8. Lo Que Siempre He Soñado; 9. Jamás Corazón; 10. Siempre ...
"Fuego de Noche, Nieve de Día" (English: "Fire by Night, Snow by Day") is the fourth single from Ricky Martin's album, A Medio Vivir (1995). It was released as a promotional single in the United States on April 16, 1996.
After the music of both artists was the topic of conversation in several of the morning conferences of the President of Mexico Andrés Manuel López Obrador who recommended and broadcast live songs like "No Se Va", "Frágil" and "Un x100to" by Grupo Frontera, [5] and that on the other hand he was against the music of Peso Pluma and the corridos tumbados since this "encourages the consumption ...
In 2006, La 5ª Estación released "Tu Peor Error" (Your Worst Mistake) as the first single for the album. The single peaked at number three in Mexico and in the top-twenty in the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks. "Me muero" (I'm Dying) was released as the second single from El mundo se equivoca, the song reached number ten in the Hot Latin Tracks chart.
"Disparo al Corazón" (English: "Shot to the Heart") is a song recorded by Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin, released on January 13, 2015 as the second single from his Grammy Award–winning Spanish-language album, A Quien Quiera Escuchar (2015). [1]
" Somos El Mundo 25 Por Haiti" is a 2010 song and charity single recorded by the Latin supergroup Artists for Haiti and written by Emilio Estefan and his wife Gloria Estefan. It is a Spanish-language remake of the 1985 hit song " We Are the World ", which was written by American musicians Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie , and was recorded by ...
Al Mundo le falta un Tornillo (Spanish: The world is missing a screw) is a tango of Argentina composed in 1932 by José María Aguilar Porrás with lyrics by Enrique Cadícamo. It was recorded by Carlos Gardel for the label Odeon, and one of the most accepted version is that of Julio Sosa , recorded in 1957 for RCA Victor with Armando Portier's ...
In 1991, Mexican singer Luis Miguel covered "No Sé Tú" on his eighth studio album, Romance, a collection of boleros performed by the artist. [13] Released as the album's second single in February 1992 by WEA Latina, [14] it is one of two songs by Manzanero that Miguel covered in the album, along with "Te Extraño", as selected from among 500 others.