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I Love You, Stupid (Spanish: Te quiero, imbécil) is a 2020 Spanish romantic comedy film written and directed by Laura Mañá. The film stars Quim Gutiérrez , Natalia Tena and Alfonso Bassave in the lead roles.
Zaz received mixed reviews from musical critics.Le Figaro said the singer's voice "upsets and wins over". [2] The editors admitted they were moved by "her small skinned side" and praised "the urban blues of "Trop sensible", or the upsetting "Port Coton" or songs with realistic accents such as "Ni oui ni non" or "Dans ma rue"". [3]
In 1975, Peruvian group Los Pasteles Verdes covered "Esclavo y amo", which was released as a single from their second studio album Vol. II.Their version, which departs from the mariachi instrumentation of the original Javier Solis' version and instead has a more psychedelic [4] style typical of 70s Latin romantic groups, re-popularized the song in Mexico, where it topped the airplay charts in ...
Te Amo (I Love You) is the first studio album released by Panamanian singer-songwriter Makano on November 18, 2008. This album includes the single "Te Amo", which peaked at number-one in the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks chart. Te Amo was nominated for a Lo Nuestro Award for Urban Album of the Year. [1]
Te Amo may refer to: . Te Amo, a 2008 album by Makano; Te Amo, an album by María Conchita Alonso "Te Amo" (Makano song), 2008 "Te Amo" (Piso 21 and Paulo Londra song), 2018 "Te Amo" (Rihanna song), 2010
"Te Amo" ("I Love You") is a song written and performed by Panamanian reggaetón singer-songwriter Makano. It was released as the second single from his first international release of the same title. This single peaked at number-one in the Billboard Hot Latin Tracks chart.
"Te Extraño, Te Olvido, Te Amo" was covered by Mexican band Los Socios Del Ritmo and American singer Chiquis Rivera for the band's album, La Cumbia Es Lo De Hoy (2021). The song was released for digital download and streaming by Universal Music Mexico on February 14, 2020, as the second single from the album.
A Spanish version was released as "Te Amo", and had a good success in Spain and Latin America. Within the German-speaking countries a German version by Howard Carpendale also received a great success in 1977, peaking at number two in Germany and number ten in Austria.