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No Hay Que Preguntarlo Los Virtuosos de Cuco Valoy Salsa con Coco 1978 No la Molestes Más Los Cantantes El Virao 1995 No La Vuelvas A Querer Cuco Valoy & Los Virtuosos Sin Comentarios . . . 1982 No Me Sirve de Nada Ramón Orlando: Con el Corazón Atao 2001 No Te Importa No Ramón Orlando y Orquesta Internacional Diciembre Party 1987 No Te Irás
Puerto Rican Power Orchestra is a Puerto Rican salsa band which under this name supported Tito Rojas. [ 1 ] Puerto Rican Power was associated with singer Justo Betancourt , bassist Jesús Castro, trumpet player Luisito Ayala , singer Tito Rojas .
Las 30 Cumbias Más Pegadas (English: The 30 Best Cumbias) is a compilation album featuring music from Los Angeles Azules, Los Askis, Rayito Colombiano, Grupo Latino, Grupo Maracuya, Los Llayras, Mr. Chivo, Aniceto Molina, Super Grupo G, La Tropa Vallenata, Los Vallenatos, Yahari, among others.
These are the lists of the top 100 songs of 2018 in Mexico according to Monitor Latino. [1] Monitor Latino issued two year-end General charts: one which ranked the songs by their number of Spins (Tocadas) on the Mexican radio, and the other ranked the songs by their estimated audience.
"La Rebelión" (translation "the rebellion") is a salsa song written and performed by the Colombian singer Joe Arroyo. The song tells the story of a married African couple, slaves of a Spaniard, in Cartagena, Colombia in the 17th century. The slave owner abuses the wife, and the husband avenges her, starting a rebellion.
El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico, commonly known as El Gran Combo, is a Puerto Rican salsa orchestra based in San Juan, Puerto Rico. [2] Celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2012, it was often considered Puerto Rico 's most successful musical group. [ 3 ]
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]
"Canciones que México canta" ("Songs that Mexico sings"), which listed the Top 10 most popular Spanish-language songs in Mexico, and "Hit Parade", which was a Top 10 of the most popular songs in Mexico that were in languages other than Spanish. For reasons unknown, the magazine stopped publishing the "Hit Parade" chart in 1988 and wouldn't ...