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Palabras del Silencio (English: Words from the Silence) is the seventh studio album, and sixth in Spanish recorded by Puerto Rican singer-songwriter Luis Fonsi.The album was released by Universal Music Latino on 26 August 2008 (see 2008 in music).
"Lo Poco Que Tengo" ("What Little That I Have") is a song written by Guatemalan singer-songwriter Ricardo Arjona for his fourteenth studio album, Viaje. The song was released the song as the second single from the record, on April 22, 2014.
Rosario (birth name: Fernando Luis Rosario Marín [a]) was born and raised in Coamo, Puerto Rico, [3] into a poor, but hard working family. His parents realized that as a child Willie was musically inclined and had him take guitar lessons at the age of six. [ 3 ]
"Tengo Todo Excepto a Ti" has been covered by several performers, including Aramis Camilo, Carlos Cuevas, Los Flamers, Darvel García, Kika y Raúl, Komboloko and Giovanni Vivanco. [10] Mexican band La Posta also recorded a version of the track, which was used as the main theme for the telenovela of the same title, which was broadcast in ...
The series, hosted by Marco Antonio Regil who also previously hosted ¿Que dice la gente? from 2006 until 2008 and 100 mexicanos dijeron from 2001 until 2006 respectively was transmitted by MundoMax (formerly MundoFox), premiered on September 9, 2013. [1] This show was cancelled in 2016 due to its network, MundoMax, being dissolved.
"A Dios le Pido" (I beg to God) is the lead single from the Spanish studio album Un Día Normal by the Latin music singer and songwriter Juanes, released in 2002 in Spain and Latin America. In 2006, the song was re-released in some countries in Europe, right after the success of " La Camisa Negra ", which charted in almost every European ...
Sólo le pido a Dios (in English: I only ask of God) is a famous protest song, written by Argentine singer-songwriter León Gieco. It is the first song of Gieco's 1978 album, IV LP . History
[4] [5] "Todo y Nada" became Miguel's third consecutive number-one song from Segundo Romance in Mexico; and became a top-five hit in Chile, Panama and Puerto Rico. This was the second time that Luis Miguel had covered a song by Garrido, the first being "No Me Platiqués Más" on Romance (1991). [ 6 ]