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Love Love (Spanish: Amor perdido) is a 1951 Mexican musical drama film directed by Miguel Morayta and starring Amalia Aguilar and Víctor Junco. The plot is inspired by the famous bolero of the same name by Pedro Flores. It is in the tradition of Rumberas films. It was shot at the Clasa Studios in Mexico City.
Flores composed various different works, including: Obsesión, Amor Perdido (Lost Love), Bajo un Palmar (Under A Palm Tree), Borracho no Vale (which may translate to Drunk Doesn't Count or Doesn't Count If You're Drunk), Linda, Sin Bandera (Without a Flag), Despedida (Farewell), and Perdón (I'm Sorry).
María Luisa Landín (9 October 1921 – 20 June 2014) was a Mexican singer. She sang bolero, Latin ballad and mariachi styles and was most noted for bolero. She began her career singing as a duo with her sister, but her most memorable works were as a solo singer after their duet broke up.
Amor Perdido (transl. Lost Love) is the seventh studio album by American regional Mexican band Eslabon Armado.It was released on October 4, 2024, through DEL Records.The album was set for release in early 2024, but was withholded by DEL Records who prevented it from releasing, which would have ended their contract with the label.
Del amor y otros demonios (Of Love and Other Demons) 1994 The first edition was published simultaneously by publishing houses Mondadori, Sudamericana, Diana, and Norma. [29] [35] The novel is set in a colonial seaport in South America and it tells the tale of Sierva María, a girl who may or may not have contracted rabies. [16]
Estrada's American brother-in-law, Henry Munn, translated many of the chants from Spanish to English, and wrote about the significance of her language. Munn wrote that María Sabina brilliantly used themes common to Mazatec and Mesoamerican spiritual traditions, but at the same time was "a unique talent, a masterful oral poet, and craftsperson ...
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To date, it is his only English-language song that he has commercially released. [40] Miguel recorded "Sueña", the Spanish-language version of "Someday" from Disney's 1996 film The Hunchback of Notre Dame for the Latin American edition of the film's soundtrack and it was included on Nada Es Igual.