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The song debuted in the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart (formerly Hot Latin Tracks) at number 33 in the week of June 2, 1990, climbing to the top ten two weeks later. [5] [6] "Tengo Todo Excepto a Ti" peaked at number-one on July 21, 1990, holding this position for eight consecutive weeks, [7] replacing "El Cariño Es Como Una Flor" by Rudy La Scala and being replaced by José Feliciano with ...
The Return of El Santo is the second album by the Latin ska band King Changó, released in 2000. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] The album's title is a tribute to Mexican wrestler El Santo . [ 7 ]
"Sin Ti" (English: "Without You") is a song by Mexican singer Samo from his first studio album Inevitable. It was revealed that the song is the first single from the album released on May 27, 2013, on radio, and digitally on July 16, 2013.
"México lindo y querido" is a traditional mariachi and ranchera Mexican song written by Chucho Monge and made famous by singer Jorge Negrete ("the singing charro"). [1] He sang it in the 1952 movie Forever Yours.
The Second relation letter from Hernán Cortés to emperor Charles V is one of the five Letters of relation written by Hernán Cortés to Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor by his name in the Holy Roman Empire, and to his mother, the queen Joanna of Castile in which he relates his trips to Mexico and the Fall of Mexico-Tenochtitlán.
In June 1970, the 9-year-old Norwegian singer Anita Hegerland became a famed child singer with a recording [8] in Swedish (Mitt sommarlov, "My summer break") that topped the Swedish best selling chart Kvällstoppen for five weeks and Svensktoppen for seven weeks [9] as well as the Norwegian singles chart for three weeks. [10]
Sabine Moussier as Eleonor Cortázar Armenta de Rivas; María Marcela as Doña Carola "Caro" Tinoco Vda. de Lorentti; Andrea Torre as Fabiola Escalante de Rivas; Ricardo Franco as José Carlos Rivas Olmedo; Luz María Jerez as Irene Olmedo de Rivas; Ximena Herrera as Isabela Rivas Olmedo Reyes; Beatriz Aguirre as Doña Miranda de la Reguera de ...
"El Son de la Negra" (lit. The Song of the Black Woman) is a Mexican folk song , originally from Tepic, Nayarit , [ 1 ] before its separation from the state of Jalisco , and best known from an adaptation by Jalisciense musical composer Blas Galindo in 1940 for his suite Sones de mariachi .