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The video, released December 6, 2004, on Newgrounds.com, shows Brolsma lip syncing the hit song with lively gesticulations and dance moves. [122] [194] "Pop Culture" – A 2011 YouTube video of a live mash-up by the musician Hugo Pierre Leclercq aka "Madeon", age 17 at the time, using a Novation touchpad to mix samples from 39 different songs ...
Camilo Echeverri Correa (born March 16, 1994), [1] known mononymously as Camilo, is a Colombian singer, musician and songwriter.Born in Medellín, Antioquia, his accolades include six Latin Grammy Awards and three Grammy Award nominations.
Commercially, "Teléfono" became Aitana's second number-one single in Spain after "Lo malo", and has been certified 3× platinum in her home country by Productores de Música de España. A music video for the song was released prior to its single release on 26 July 2018, which went on to become the most-watched Vevo music video within 24 hours ...
Ha*Ash: En Vivo (transl. "Live") is the first live concert DVD and second live album by American Latin pop duo Ha*Ash. [3] It was released through Sony Music Latin and OCESA Seitrack on December 6, 2019 as a digital download. [ 4 ]
The music video was released along with the single on October 4, 2023 via Bizarrap's YouTube channel. [18]The video is made up of 5 chapters of different songs titled "Toy en el Mic", "No Soy Eterno", "Fruto" and "Penas de Antaño" which were released simultaneously with the session on the same day, for the release of Bizarrap's first EP on the same day, En Dormir Sin Madrid.
The third single of the band was "Daría" ("I Would Give") which also met with great success, the video was filmed in Mexico City and reached No. 1 on the VH1 Latin America Top 20 and other charts in Latin America. "Niña" ("Girl") was the latest single of the album. The video was quite controversial and also made it to the VH1's chart.
"Tren al Sur" (English: "Train to the South") is a song from the album Corazones by the Chilean rock/pop band Los Prisioneros, released as the main single on May 7, 1990. It was considered one of the 50 most important Latin pop songs by Rolling Stone and one of the most groundbreaking Hispanic songs by The Observer .
"Acróstico" was co-written by Shakira, Keityn, Luis Fernando Ochoa and L.E.X.U.Z. Colombian songwriter Keityn, who had previously co-written "Te Felicito" and "Monotonía" for Shakira's album, stated in an interview that the inspiration behind the song was the acrostics that her mother used to compose for him when he was a child. [6]