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The Charivarius section was continued by Nolst Trenité until De Groene was banned by the occupying forces in 1940. Three anthologies — Charivari (1913) and Charivaria (1915 and 1916) — have been published, as well as five collections under the name Ruize-rijmen (1914-1918), from which an anthology was compiled in 1922, also under the title ...
En Vivo: Desde la Plaza El Progreso en Guadalajara (Eng.: Live: From Plaza El Progreso en Guadalajara') is the title of the second live album released by Mexican singer-songwriter Joan Sebastian. This album became his first number-one hit on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart.
The source text, annotated by me with pronunciation hints, may be found on a Wikisource user page.. In general, many words have been pronounced using uncommon, dated, or outright archaic pronunciations, for maximum effect; for instance, “wont” is now usually a homophone of “want”, but has here been pronounced like “won’t”, as that produces a sound not otherwise heard in this line ...
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"The Chaos" is a poem demonstrating the irregularity of English spelling and pronunciation.Written by Dutch writer, traveller, and teacher Gerard Nolst Trenité (1870–1946) under the pseudonym of Charivarius, it includes about 800 examples of irregular spelling.
Los Lobos del Este de Los Angeles (Just another band from East L.A.) is the debut album by the American band Los Lobos, at the time known as Los Lobos del Este de Los Angeles. It was self-released by the band in early 1978 and features mostly traditional Mexican folk music .
In 1962, five high-school friends from a small town of San Andres, a suburb of Guadalajara, State of Jalisco, Mexico, united their incipient musical skills to form a group called The Freddy Boys that would eventually become one of Mexico's most popular bands and influential in the development of Spanish music across Latin America for the next 30 years.
Gilberto José Rodríguez Orejuela was born on Jan. 30, 1939, in Mariquita, Colombia, about 110 miles northwest of Bogotá.His family moved to Cali when he was a child. His father, Carlos Rodríguez, was a painter; his mother, Ana Rita Orejuela, was a homemaker.