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One of the album's merengue tracks is "El Costo de la Vida", which is a Spanish-language adaptation of the 1988 soukous song "Kimia Eve" by Congolese band Loketo. [ 3 ] [ 9 ] The band's lead musician and song composer Diblo Dibala makes an appearance on the track playing the soukous guitar for Guerra's cover. [ 9 ]
Indie band Jukebox The Ghost recorded a cover of the song for Engine Room Recordings' compilation album Guilt by Association Vol. 2, which was released in November 2008. [63] In 2015, the American dance-pop trio Punch !nc recorded a reimagined version of the song, titled "Heaven (Beautiful Life)."
"El Camino de la Vida" (translation "the road of life") is a Colombian song written in 1986 by Héctor Ochoa Cárdenas. It was popularized by the recording of the song by Arboleda y Valencia. [1] [2] After a public poll conducted in 1999, the song was chosen by the Academia Colombiana de Musica as the Colombian Song of the 20th century.
"Porque te vas" is a romantic ballad [17] that incorporates elements of funk, disco and pop music, featuring a predominant use of the saxophone. [18] Critic Julián Molero of Lafonoteca described the track's instrumentation as "full of self-confidence with almost mocking interventions of the brasses and the crash of the drums releasing unexpected blows". [19]
"El Amor de Mi Vida" (English: "The Love of My Life") is the second single from Ricky Martin's debut solo album Ricky Martin. It was released on February 25, 1992. A music video was also released. The song reached number eight on the Hot Latin Songs in the United States.
Una flecha en el aire, Cielito lindo, lanzó Cupido. Si la tiró jugando, Cielito lindo, a mí me ha herido. (Estribillo) From the Sierra Morena, Pretty little heaven, come down A pair of little black eyes, Pretty little heaven, sneaking by. Refrain: Woe, woe, woe, woe, Sing and don't cry, Because singing rejoices, Pretty little heaven, our hearts.
Amor, vida de mi vida (Love, life of my life) is an aria for baritone from the zarzuela Maravilla composed by Federico Moreno Torroba to a libretto by Antonio Quintero and Jesús María de Arozamena. [1] It premiered in Madrid in 1941, where the aria was sung by the baritone, Luis Sagi-Vela.
¡Noble patria!, tu hermosa bandera expresión de tu vida nos da; bajo el límpido azul de tu cielo blanca y pura descansa la paz. En la lucha tenaz, de fecunda labor, que enrojece del hombre la faz; conquistaron tus hijos, labriegos sencillos, 𝄆 eterno prestigio, estima y honor. 𝄇 ¡Salve, oh tierra gentil! ¡Salve, oh madre de amor!