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La Sonora Dinamita is a Colombian [1] and Mexican [2] [3] [4] musical group that plays cumbia, a Tropical music genre from Colombia but popular throughout Latin America. As one of the first cumbia groups to reach international success, it is credited with helping to popularize the genre throughout Latin America and the world.
La Sonora Dinamita [13] La Sonora Ponceña [14] Los Corraleros de Majagual [15] Los Llopis [16] Los Wawancó [17] Margarita la Diosa de la Cumbia [18] Gonzalo Martinez [19] Aniceto Molina [20] Carmen Rivero [21] Pedro Salcedo & His Orchestra [22] Tropical Panamá [23] Charlie Zaa [24] Yuri [25]
Las 30 Cumbias Más Pegadas, Vol. 2 (2003) Las 30 Cumbias Más Pegadas (English: The 30 Best Cumbias ) is a compilation album featuring music from Los Angeles Azules , Los Askis, Rayito Colombiano, Grupo Latino, Grupo Maracuya, Los Llayras, Mr. Chivo, Aniceto Molina, Super Grupo G, La Tropa Vallenata, Los Vallenatos, Yahari, among others.
"La Colegiala" ("the collegian", or "girl student" in Spanish) is a Latin iconic song composed in 1975 by Walter León Aguilar, leader of the Peruvian cumbia ensemble Los Ilusionistas, and made hugely popular in the early 1980s by the Colombian singer Rodolfo Aicardi, crediting it to Rodolfo y su Tipica RA7.
The Mexican cumbia has adapted versions of Colombian music like Peruvian cumbia or Argentine cumbia, among others.This diversity has appeared in different ways. For example, originally the northern cumbia (cumbia norteña) was usually played with accordion and consists of tunes with few chords and slower speed than original cumbia.
The majority of contemporary reviews on "Baila Esta Cumbia" were positive. Billboard contributor Ramiro Burr praised the song for its "melodic hook". [8] Burr, who wrote in The Billboard Guide to Tejano and Regional Mexican Music (1999), opined that Selena "evolved a rhythmic style" which paved way for "catchy cumbias", giving "Baila Esta Cumbia" as his example of her "increasing prowess". [9]
Margarita María de Santa Teresita Vargas Gaviria (Spanish pronunciation: [maɾɣaˈɾita ˈβaɾɣas]) better known by her stage name Margarita La Diosa de la Cumbia, is a Colombian-Mexican singer. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
The song "Que nadie sepa mi sufrir", was composed in 1936 by Ángel Cabral, with Spanish lyrics by Enrique Dizeo, both of Argentine origin, as a Peruvian waltz.Peruvian waltz, also known as vals criollo ("creole waltz"), was a popular genre in Hispanic America between the 1930s and 1950s, and the song, initially covered by Argentine singer Hugo del Carril, became a regional hit.