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The song begins with a countdown "uno, dos, tres, cuatro" and features the sound of car horns honking in the background. [6] "La Carcacha" employs a comical narrative intertwined with an underlying moral message. [1] The lyrics of "La Carcacha" revolve around a poignant commentary on materialism and superficiality.
At the beginning of the song, Bono counts off in Spanish "Unos, dos, tres, catorce!" [10] In English, this translates to "some, two, three, fourteen!"[11] When asked about this oddity in an interview for Rolling Stone, Bono replied "there may have been some alcohol involved". [9]
The song features a bilingual count off of "uno, dos, one, two, tres, cuatro". [17] "Taxman" by the Beatles (1966) George Harrison performs two count offs on the track—one is to set the tempo (and is most audible on the fourth beat), and another is for effect (it is off-tempo, "secretive-sounding", and layered with coughing) which was added ...
Sam the Sham underscores the Tex-Mex nature of the song by counting out the rhythm in Spanish and English ("Uno! Dos! One, two, tres, cuatro!"), and the characteristic simple organ riffing, with a tenor saxophone solo in the middle. According to Samudio, "The count down part of the song was also not planned.
Songs such as "La edad del porvenir" or "Uno, dos, tres, cuatro" will bring him fame in Spain. He also recorded a cover of "Las casas de cartón" of the Venezuelan songwriter Alí Primera. In 1996 Javier Álvarez records his second LP Dos and three years later, in 1999, his LP Tres, where he experiments with electronic and more "radical" lyrics ...
We don’t talk about Bruno, but that doesn’t mean we’re gatekeeping Sebastián Yatra’s “Dos Oruguitas” lyrics in English—especially after the song’s nomination and performance at ...
¡Uno! (stylized in all caps ) is the ninth studio album by the American rock band Green Day , released on September 25, 2012, by Reprise Records . It is the first of three albums in the ¡Uno! , ¡Dos! , ¡Tré! trilogy, a series of studio albums released from September 2012 to December 2012.
Un, dos, tres... responda otra vez (transl. One, two, three... respond again ), usually shortened as Un, dos, tres... , and named Un, dos, tres... a leer esta vez ( transl. One, two, three... reading this time ) in its last season, is a Spanish prime-time television game show created by Narciso Ibáñez Serrador that was broadcast on La Primera ...