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In 2009, Rivera sang "Madrigal", "Tu pueblo es mi pueblo", and "Amar o morir" before 1.2 million listeners in Havana (almost all of them wearing all white) at the Paz Sin Fronteras concert organized by Juanes; the concert was seen throughout the hemisphere and in Europe by millions of television and online viewers, the biggest Latin music ...
En la Plaza de mi Pueblo ("In the square of my village") is a Spanish-language song originating during the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939, and is usually attributed to the anarchist CNT-FAI, a prominent labour organization at the time which sent its own militias to fight alongside the Spanish Republican Army during the Civil War.
El Canta Autor del Pueblo is the first studio album by regional Mexican artist Espinoza Paz. It was released on 18 March 2008, by American Show Latin / Machete Regio . Background
Inmensa nostalgia invade mi pensamiento, y, al verme, tan solo y triste cual hoja al viento, ¡quisiera llorar ‒ quisiera morir ‒ de sentimiento! ¡Oh tierra del sol! suspiro por verte. Ahora que lejos yo vivo sin luz ‒ sin amor. Y, al verme tan solo y triste cual hoja al viento, quisiera llorar, quisiera morir de sentimiento.
A Man And His Music: Poeta del Pueblo also known as Poeta del Pueblo is the fourth compilation album by Rubén Blades released on March 11, 2008. [1] Being together with his album Anthology released on March 27, [2] 2012 similar compilations only that this compilation has more successes in his career in Fania, the album contains songs by Blades in his stay at Fania from 1974 (with Willie ...
Por Amor a Mi Pueblo (Eng.: "For Love of My Town") is the sixteenth and final studio album released by Los Bukis on May 2, 1995. [1] The album was certified gold in the United States by the RIAA. It was nominated for Pop Album of the Year at the Premio Lo Nuestro 1996. [2]
El Rock de Mi Pueblo (transl. The Rock of My Village ) is the eleventh studio album recorded by Colombian singer-songwriter Carlos Vives . It was released on August 31, 2004.
The English version of the song was recorded by Bing Crosby on 11 February 1945 with Xavier Cugat conducting the Waldorf-Astoria Orchestra. [7] Later in the same decade (1949) it was recorded for Muzak by Alfredo Antonini and his orchestra in collaboration with Victoria Cordova and John Serry Sr. [ 8 ]