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Resistiré was composed by Manuel de la Calva, one of the members of the Duo Dinámico, who was inspired by Camilo José Cela's phrase “el que resiste gana” [2] and the lyrics were written by Carlos Toro Montoro, sports journalist and Spanish composer, creator of more than 1,800 songs with many of them becoming important hits.
"Dos Oruguitas" was the first song Miranda wrote completely in Spanish. This amount of Spanish was far outside his comfort zone. [3] [4] Miranda said, "It was important to me that I write it in Spanish, rather than write it in English and translate it, because you can always feel translation". [5]
A. A Dios le Pido; A la Nanita Nana; A la Primera Persona; A las Barricadas; A Medio Vivir (song) A Palé; A Pedir Su Mano; A Puro Dolor ¿A quién le importa?
The upbeat instrumentals and the chorus with lyrics like “I’m walking on sunshine and don’t it feel good” makes this ‘80s song worth playing over and over again. Listen Here 21.
The EP consists of five songs entirely sung in Spanish. The songs were originally written by Spanish musician Antonio Luque and performed by his band, Sr. Chinarro. [3] The EP also features contributions from fellow musicians Nicolas Bragg, Stephen Hamm, Josh Wells, along with John Collins and David Carswell, [4] who also produced the record.
"Perdiendo la Cabeza" is a song by Mexican singer Carlos Rivera, American singer Becky G and Puerto Rican singer Pedro Capó. The song and its music video was released by Sony Music Latin on January 31, 2020, as the first single from Rivera's seventh album, Crónicas de una Guerra (2021).
The trio's album contains two versions of the song, one with Belinda vocals and the other without it. [5] The song features with the participation of the Mexican singer Belinda. The song was announced for the first time on February 14, 2013, through the social networks of the artists, who want to surprise their fans with a taste of the song. [7]
Enrique Lopetegui of the Los Angeles Times wrote: "But it's the two new Spanish ranchera songs [El Toro Relajo and Tú Sólo Tú], backed by El Monte's Mariachi Sol de Mexico, that are most impressive, as Selena effortlessly adapted to a difficult style she wasn't very familiar with, However Selena was sick during the recording, so her voice wasn't in good shape."