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"Cantaré, Cantarás" was recorded with the purpose of raising funds to boost the campaigns of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) in Latin America. Producers Albert Hammond, José Quintana, Manuel Montoya, Peter Lopez, Luis Medina, and Jose Behar, Co-Founders of non-profit organization HERMANOS, producers of "Cantare, Cantaras" were in charge of the project, bringing together more ...
Among the poems in the collection are Yo soy un hombre sincero (I), Si ves un monte de espumas (V) and Cultivo una rosa blanca (XXXIX). Verses pruned from various poems were adapted into the folk song " Guantanamera ", which is the most popular patriotic song of Cuba and was popularized in the US in the 1960s during the American folk music ...
Quítame Ese Hombre Del Corazón / Luz De Luna / Como Lo Hago Yo / Serás Mío / Débil (Album Tracks) Frente A Frente Con Sophy: El Amor / Al Ritmo De La Fantasía / Débil / Este Amor Que Hay Que Callar / Como Lo Hago Yo (Album Tracks) Canciones De Amor… Con Las Reinas: Contigo (From Laberinto de Amor) Canciones De Amor… En Boleros
Soloquartet and strings. A cantata (/ k æ n ˈ t ɑː t ə /; Italian: [kanˈtaːta]; literally "sung", past participle feminine singular of the Italian verb cantare, "to sing") is a vocal composition with an instrumental accompaniment, typically in several movements, often involving a choir.
A cantar de gesta is the Spanish equivalent of the Old French medieval chanson de geste or "songs of heroic deeds".. The most important cantares de gesta of Castile were: . The Cantar de Mio Cid, where the triumph of the true nobility, founded on effort, merit and optimism is narrated, as opposed to the blood nobility that the fictitious characters Infantes of Carrión represent.
The following is a sample from Cantar de Mio Cid (lines 330–365), with abbreviations resolved, punctuation (the original has none), and some modernized letters. [ note 1 ] Below, the original Old Spanish text is presented in the first column, along with the same sample in modern Spanish in the second column and an English translation in the ...
"Hoy Tengo Ganas de Ti" (English: "Today I Have Desire for You") is a song written and performed by Spanish singer-songwriter Miguel Gallardo. It was released in 1975 as the lead single from his second studio album Miguel Gallardo 2.
Cutugno composed the song following a concert in Toronto, which inspired him to write a song dedicated to Italian emigrants. [2] The lyrics were written by his close collaborator of the time Cristiano Minellono, who got the initial inspiration for it from the title of a Canale 5 program of the time, Buongiorno Italia.