Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In the song, Miguel chants: "suave como me mata tu mirada, suave es el perfume de tu piel, suave son tus caricias, como siempre te soñé, como siempre te soñé" ("smooth, how you look kills, smooth, it is the perfume of your skin, smooth, it is your caress as I've always dreamed of you"). [12]
In 1991, Mexican singer Luis Miguel covered "No Sé Tú" on his eighth studio album, Romance, a collection of boleros performed by the artist. [13] Released as the album's second single in February 1992 by WEA Latina, [14] it is one of two songs by Manzanero that Miguel covered in the album, along with "Te Extraño", as selected from among 500 others.
"Bésame Mucho" (Spanish: [ˈbesame ˈmutʃo]; "Kiss Me A Lot") is a bolero song written in 1932 by Mexican songwriter Consuelo Velázquez. [2] It is one of the most popular songs of the 20th century and one of the most important songs in the history of Latin music. It was recognized in 1999 as the most recorded and covered song in Spanish of ...
que te brindo con pasión. No me digas no, que en tu boca está el secreto de mi amor. Cuando la noche llegó y con su manto de azul el blanco rancho cubrió, alegre el baile empezó. Baila, mi chiapaneca; baila, baila con garbo; baila, suave rayo de luz. Baila mi chiapaneca; baila, baila con garbo, que en el baile la reina eres tú ...
in te, ravviso il sogno ch'io vorrei sempre sognar! Entrambi M: Ah, tu sol comandi, amor! R: Fremon già nell'anima le dolcezze estreme Mimì: assai commossa Tu sol comandi, amore! Entrambi Rodolfo cingendo colle braccia Mimì R: Fremon nell'anima dolcezze estreme, fremon dolcezze estreme, M: quasi abbandonandosi Oh come dolci scendono le sue ...
The melody for Te souviens-tu? would later be used for the German anti-war song Ich bin Soldat, doch bin ich es nicht gerne ("I am a soldier, but I do not like it"), written in 1870 by Max Kegel. In 1870, a satirical song called Paris pour un beefsteak was also composed using the same music during the Siege of Paris .
"Ahora Te Puedes Marchar" (in English: "Now You Can Leave") is a song by Mexican singer Luis Miguel, released as the debut single from his fifth studio album, Soy Como Quiero Ser (1987). Written by Ivor Raymonde , Luis Gomez Escolar and Mike Hawker , it is a Spanish-language adaptation of the 1964 song " I Only Want to Be With You " by Dusty ...
The song was inducted into the Latin Grammy Hall of Fame in 2001. [4] "El día que me quieras" was honored at the 2014 La Musa Awards as "La Canción de Todos los Tiempos" ("The Song of All Times"). [5] It was among the tango standards selected by Plácido Domingo for his 1981 album Plácido Domingo Sings Tangos.