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Early pressings of El Cielo were in a digipack with pictures of clouds bordered by runes. Later pressings of El Cielo are in a jewel case. The cover of the later versions is the cover of the booklet, which is a sort of brown leathery texture with the band's name and the album name on it (although jewel case versions with the "clouds" cover are ...
1994 El Tiempo. The second album went platinum and included the hits Sin Tí, Cielo and Mía. All of them became number one hits in Latin America. 1996 Om. On this third album, Benny wrote more songs about himself, but it was not the commercial success of its predecessor. The singles were Cada Mañana, Mas de Tí and Sutil Dolor. 2001 Todo O Nada
Abigail (song) Aceita; Active (song) Addicted (Zerb and the Chainsmokers song) Adivino; After Hours (Kehlani song) AGATS2 (Insecure) Agora (María Becerra song) Ain't No Love in Oklahoma; Aldrig mer; Alegría (Tiago PZK, Anitta and Emilia song) Alibi (Ella Henderson song) Alibi (Sevdaliza, Pabllo Vittar and Yseult song) Alienated (song) All I ...
Cometas Por El Cielo is the sixth studio album by La Oreja de Van Gogh. It was released on 13 September 2011 under Sony Music . It is the second album by the band not produced by Nigel Walker.
Danny Wool, representing Wikipedia, receives a 2004 Golden Nica. A category begun in 2004 with support from SAP (and a separate ceremony in New York City two months before the main Ars Electronica ceremony) to celebrate the 25th birthday of Ars Electronica. Two Golden Nicas were awarded. 2004 – Wikipedia and The World Starts With Me. Distinction:
"Luz V", also known as "V", is the fifth studio album by the Spanish rock singer-songwriter Luz Casal.It was her very first album released in 1989 under Hispavox her new label after departing from Zafiro, her former record company.
Arde El Cielo debuted at #30 on the Billboard 200 chart with 17,000 copies sold; [1] it also debuted at #11 on the Billboard Top Rock Albums chart. The disc has been certified double platinum in the US for 400,000 copies as well as gold and platinum in Mexico and Spain for over 120,000 and 40,000 units sold respectively.
The English-language version of the song was also recorded by Connie Francis in her 1963 album Connie Francis Sings Modern Italian Hits. [26] In 1976, Italian singer Franco Simone included his own version of the song in the album Il poeta con la chitarra. The track was released as a 7" single in 1977, with the B-side "Sarà". [27]