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Latin ballad (Spanish: balada romántica) is a sentimental ballad derived from bolero that originated in the early 1960s in Los Angeles, California and Southern California. ...
Salsa romántica was heavily influenced by the balada style (or pop style) of salsa and is widely criticized due to the simple compositional style of both types. [3] Salsa romántica has been considered to be an imitation of classic salsa. [4]
The current Grupo Bryndis band members are: Mauro Posadas Gallardo (songwriter-leader and electric guitar); Gerardo Izaguirre (songwriter and bass guitar); Claudio Pablo Montaño (songwriter and electronic keyboards); Mauro Posadas Gallardo Jr. (); Andy Zuñiga (Electronic percussions, songwriter and lead vocalist).
1996 – Nuestras Canciones, Edicion de Oro, En Concierto Vol. 1 Fonovisa. 1996 – 15 Súper Éxitos Volumen 1; 1997 – Nuestras Canciones Vol. 2, En Concierto Vol. 2; 1998 – Como Te Recuerdo, 15 Exitos Para Siempre; 2000 – En La Madrugada se Fue; 2001 – Baladas Rancheras, Joyas, Vol. 1, Poemas Canciones y Romance
[2] [5] The lyrics include: "Te extraño porque vive en mi tu recuerdo te olvido / A cada minuto lo intento te amo es que ya no tengo remedio / Te extraño, te olvido y te amo de nuevo" (I miss you because your memory lives in me I forget you / Every minute I try I love you is that I have no choice / I miss you, I forget you and I love you again).
By the 1930s, when Trío Matamoros made famous their mix of bolero and son cubano known as bolero-son, the genre was a staple of the musical repertoire of most Latin American countries. [10] In Spain, Cuban bolero was incorporated into the copla repertoire with added elements from Andalusian music , giving rise to the so-called bolero moruno ...
Put Me in Your Mix is a 1991 album by R&B singer Barry White. Regarded as a return to form, with exemplary slow jams, it was the third album of his comeback phase and contained the smash title track. Regarded as a return to form, with exemplary slow jams, it was the third album of his comeback phase and contained the smash title track.
Baladas en Español was released on 21 October 1996, [3] exclusively in Spanish and Portuguese-speaking territories. However, it was also released in the US by EMI Latin, making it the final Roxette album to be officially issued in the country. [4]