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The group signed with a Mexican independent label and released El Sube y Baja in 2002. The band's next release followed in 2003, and De Durango a Chicago debuted at No. 2 on the Top Latin Albums chart. A live album, En Vivo Desde Chicago (with a DVD), was released early in 2004. A year later, Y Sigue La Mata Dando was released and in 2006.
Desde Gayola (en English "From Armchairs") was a Mexican late-night live television sketch comedy and variety show created by Horacio Villalobos.The show premiered on the music video network Telehit in February 2002 as a sketch into the variety show Válvula de Escape.
The Villalobos Brothers are a Mexican trio of violinists, singer-songwriters, composers, and multi- instrumentalists. They have performed at the Latin Grammy Awards, Carnegie Hall, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the 60th Anniversary of the United Nations, the Rainbow Room at Rockefeller Center, the New York Mets field at Shea Stadium, and other historic venues.
The film was made after the success of Sabor a mí, a biopic about the Mexican singer-songwriter Álvaro Carrillo, also directed by René Cardona Jr. [2] [3] The life of José Alfredo Jiménez had already been portrayed in cinema before in Que te vaya bonito (1978); however, Pero sigo siendo el rey had a bigger budget.
Rey recorded the theme song to Todd Solondz's cult comedy Welcome to the Dollhouse (1995), as well as a number of other tracks on the soundtrack. In the movie, Rey's recording of the theme song is the one that is heard while a young actor's character plays the song with his garage band. [2] [3] In the 2010s, he played with The Martinets. [4]
A chart published by Record World credited "El Rey" as reaching number one in Mexico in 1974, [5] a year after Jiménez' death. "El Rey" remains a staple of Ranchera and traditional Mexican music. The song has been covered by various artists, including Vicente Fernández - often considered the most well-known version of "El Rey" - his son ...
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"Obsesión" is a 1935 Spanish-language bolero song by Puerto Rican songwriter Pedro Flores.The song is one of Flores' best known has been recorded by many artists. Flores was resident in New York where his Cuarteto Flores, including Panchito Riset and Daniel Santos, made his boleros popular.