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The Ketchup Song" a.k.a. "Aserejé" (2002) by Las Ketchup "Bad Habits" (2016) by The Last Shadow Puppets "Me Leva" (1994) by Latino "Não adianta chorar" (1994) by Latino "The World Is Stone" (1992) by Cyndi Lauper "Babe I'm Gonna Leave You" (1969) by Led Zeppelin "Stairway To Heaven" (1971) by Led Zeppelin "Sleeping Beauty" (1978) by Lene Lovich
The song being performed at the end of the 1929 cartoon Finding His Voice. Charles Ives quoted the song in A Symphony: New England Holidays (1897–1913): I. Washington's Birthday, towards the end of the movement. Meredith Willson features the piece as the tenth number in The Music Man (1957).
"Spanish Lady" is a traditional Irish folk song, also found in England. The Bodleian Library has several broadsides of an English ballad with this name, one dating from the 17th century. [1] Fragmentary or related versions from the US date from 1883. It is #542 [2] in the Roud Folk Song Index.
"Spanish Ladies" (Roud 687) is a traditional British naval song, typically describing a voyage from Spain to the Downs from the viewpoint of ratings of the Royal Navy. [1] Other prominent variants include an American variant called "Yankee Whalermen", an Australian variant called " Brisbane Ladies ", and a Newfoundland variant called " The ...
Večerní písně (Evening Songs) Op. 31 for voice and piano after poems by Vítězslav Hálek, List of compositions by Antonín Dvořák; Večerní písně (Evening Songs), List of compositions by Zdeněk Fibich; Vecerni pisne (Evening Songs) 1879 List of compositions by Bedřich Smetana "Evening Song", song for voice & piano, A. 24 Charles ...
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I have never heard more beautiful bells Than the ones of your cloister Where my suffering is eased. Nostalgic Zapopan, Open missal in which monks are my feelings. Ay ay ay ay! Beautiful Guadalajara. One thing I have to tell you: Your well water is eternally Like the devoted rebozo of your women. Guadalajara, Guadalajara. You're the actual heart ...
Malagueña Salerosa — also known as La Malagueña — is a well-known Son Huasteco or Huapango song from Mexico, which has been covered more than 200 times [1] by recording artists. The song is that of a man telling a woman (from Málaga , Spain) how beautiful she is, and how he would love to be her man, but that he understands her rejecting ...