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"No Se Va" (transl. "It Doesn't Go Away" ) is a song by Colombian band Morat . It was released on 7 March 2019 as the sixth single from their album Balas perdidas (2018). [ 1 ]
By the mid-2010s, the nightcore scene had garnered attention from musicians such as Djemba Djemba, Maxo and Harrison, Nina Las Vegas, Ryan Hemsworth, Lido, Moistbreezy, and PC Music founders Danny L Harle and A. G. Cook. [7] Harle and Cook have claimed nightcore to be influences in interviews, [7] the former saying in an interview: [14]
"No Se Ve" (stylized as "No_se_ve.mp3") is a song by Argentine singer Emilia and Brazilian singer Ludmilla. They wrote it in collaboration with Duki and its producer Francisco Zecca. The song was released on 3 May 2023, through WK Records, as the second single from Emilia's second studio album .MP3 .
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"No Sé Tú" (transl. "I Don't Know About You" ) [ 1 ] is a song written and performed by Mexican singer-songwriter Armando Manzanero , released from his studio album, Cariñosamente (1986). A popular bolero song, the lyrics describe the protagonist unable to stop thinking about his lover.
The band recorded another version of the song for the BBC on November 9, 1991, at Maida Vale in London during their appearance on Radio 1's Mark Goodier Radio Session. The session, their last for the BBC, was first broadcast on November 18, 1991, [ 14 ] and three of the four songs from the session, including "Polly", appeared on the band's ...
The song debuted at No. 55 on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 22 (becoming their highest peaking song since the 2005 hit "Wake Me Up When September Ends", and their second-to-last single to debut on the chart, as after 'Oh Love', all of their subsequent tracks have failed to chart), and No. 81 on the Canadian Hot 100, reaching #15.
" Va, pensiero" (Italian: [ˈva penˈsjɛːro]), also known as the "Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves", is a chorus from the opera Nabucco (1842) by Giuseppe Verdi. It recollects the period of Babylonian captivity after the destruction of Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem in 586 BC.