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"Todo el amor que te hace falta" Manuel Alejandro, Ana Magdalena: 5:20: 3. "Intentando otra vez enamorarte" Manuel Alejandro, Sandra Beigbeder: 3:32: 4. "Procura Hablarle Tu" Manuel Alejandro, Marian Beigbeder: 3:48: 5. "Que No Se Rompa la Noche" Manuel Alejandro, Ana Magdalena: 4:26: 6. "Un hombre solo" Manuel Alejandro, Marian Beigbeder: 3:52 ...
"Todo el Amor Que Te Hace Falta" (1987) " Que No Se Rompa la Noche " (English: May the Night Have No End ) literally "May the Night not Break", is a ballad written and produced by Spanish singer-songwriter Manuel Alejandro , co-written by Ana Magdalena, and performed by Spanish singer Julio Iglesias .
Poema de Amor is the second album by Brazilian music superstar Elis Regina, ... "Canção De Enganar Despedida" (Joluz, Walter) "Confissão" (Luiz Mergulhão, Paulo ...
Additionally, the second album of the renowned Chilean series 31 Minutos is titled 31 canciones de amor y una canción de Guaripolo ("31 Love Songs and a Guaripolo Song"), making reference to the title of Neruda's book. Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair remains Neruda's most well-known work and has sold millions of copies worldwide. [3]
Falta Amor (English: Love Is Missing) is the fourth studio album by Latin American Mexican rock band Maná, their second under the name Maná, and their first under the WEA Latina label. The album had sold almost 500,000 copies worldwide by 1993, [ 2 ] and following their 1994 breakthrough in the United States, Falta Amor had sold 186,000 ...
Manuel Alejandro was born in 1932 in Jerez de la Frontera–Cádiz.He is the son of one of Spain's most renowned contemporary symphonists, Germán Álvarez Beigbeder.It was his father, an accomplished musician, professor, and composer, who inspired Manuel Alejandro to pursue music and become a composer.
"'The Heights of Macchu Picchu" (Las Alturas de Macchu Picchu) is Canto II of the Canto General.The twelve poems that comprise this section of the epic work have been translated into English regularly since even before its initial publication in Spanish in 1950, beginning with a 1948 translation by Hoffman Reynolds Hays [1] in The Tiger's Eye, a journal of arts and literature published out of ...
It also features the song "Caballo de palo", which is based on a poem by nationalist Clemente Soto Vélez. The album also features Miguel Cubano's adaptation of a poem by Hugo Margenat on the song "Vendrás". Brown had previously adapted one of Margenat's poems on Roy Brown III. "Bailando con los negros" is based on a poem by Pablo Neruda.