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"Por Un Segundo" (English: For a Second) is Aventura's first single from their fifth and final studio album The Last (2009). The song reached number one on the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks chart which was the first time for Aventura. The song was awarded "Tropical Song of the Year" at the Premios Lo Nuestro 2010 awards.
In its typical specialized usage, the word chanson refers to a polyphonic French song of the late Middle Ages and Renaissance. [4] Early chansons tended to be in one of the formes fixes — ballade , rondeau or virelai (formerly the chanson baladée )—though some composers later set popular poetry in a variety of forms.
Celentano later recorded a version with real Italian lyrics; this version, released on his 1994 album Quel Punto, was named "Il Seme del Rap" and served as a hip hop parody. In 2016, Celentano released a new recording of the song (with the original lyrics); this version featured the music of Benny Benassi and vocals from Mina .
The song, with its French inspired theme and accompanying video, was released as the fourth single in October 1988, and was taken from the debut studio album Kylie.It was written and produced by Stock Aitken Waterman, who produced Minogue's first four studio albums. [1] "
Luis Miguel covers Armando Manzanero's songs on his bolero albums Romance, Segundo Romance, and Romances. In turn, Manzanero has written several compositions for Luis Miguel including "Por Debajo de la Mesa and Dormir Contigo. American singer Frank Sinatra and Luis Miguel recorded a duet of Sinatras's 1958 single "Come Fly with Me".
Canadian comedian and impressionist Rich Little recorded a version of the song, also in 1967, in which he performed the lyrics while impersonating then-Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson and former Prime Minister John Diefenbaker. Little's version was released in March 1967 on the Allied Records label (AR 6350), one month after the original single.
Again and again, her lyrics say "Je reviens à Montréal" which when translated from French to English means "I'm coming back to Montreal." [4] Pointe-à-Callière Museum selected the song as one of five best songs about Montreal. [2] "Montreal" Allison Russell: The song's lyrics are in English and French, fluctuating between the two.
Walter Ferguson was born in Guabito, Panama on 7 May 1919, the oldest of six children.His father, Melsha Lorenzo Ferguson, was a Jamaican farmer for the United Fruit Company, and his mother, Sarah Byfield Dykin, a Costa Rican seamstress and baker of Jamaican descent.