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Danny Rivera (born 27 February 1945) is a Puerto Rican singer and songwriter born in San Juan whose career spans nearly 50 years. He is well known in Puerto Rico for his political activism. [ 1 ] In 2008, Rivera acquired Dominican Republic citizenship. [ 2 ]
In 1986 one of the classic line-ups (Fernandito, Benito, Pepito and Jorge) reunited to record a song ("Medley Trio Vegabajeño") with Danny Rivera for the album Ofrenda. Aside from that, two of the other songs were composed by members of the trio: "Meleque" (by Pepito Maduro) and "Que Lindas Son Las Mañanas" (by Benito de Jesús).
"En mi Viejo San Juan" (In my Old San Juan) is a composition by Puerto Rican composer and singer Noel Estrada. Interpreted by numerous singers and translated into various languages, the song is "widely known around the world". [2] There are musical interpretations in German, English and French.
Controversia is an album by Danny Rivera, Vicente Carattini y Los Cantores de San Juan and Alpha IV. [1] This album was Danny Rivera's first Puerto-Rican-Christmas-Music album. The title song "Controversia" ( Controversy ) is about an argument between Danny and Vicente in which Vicente accuses Danny of stealing Christmas gigs from him by ...
Ofrenda (Offering) is a Puerto Rican Christmas music and Puerto Rican folk music album by Danny Rivera.The album was Rivera's second Christmas album. As special guests he reunited legendary local folk group Trio Vegabajeño (Fernandito Alvarez, Benito de Jesús, Pepito Maduro and Jorge Hernandez).
It should only contain pages that are Danny Rivera albums or lists of Danny Rivera albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Danny Rivera albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Danny Trejo shared that he struggles with anxiety attacks — but relies on an old-school way to handle hyperventilating. “I have anxiety attacks, you know, a lot, but I blow into a bag. That ...
The original agreement between Danny and Alborada was to have the album titled Danny Rivera y Alborada (Danny Rivera and Alborada) but at the last minute the record company decided to get rid of the "y" ("and"). [2] The CD version has the name "Alborada" in a smaller font than "Danny Rivera" contributing even more to this misconception.