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Utada hosted listening parties at select Sephora beauty and cosmetics stores in Los Angeles on March 24, in New York on March 25, and in Miami on March 27 to further promote the album. [16] On March 23, the music video for the lead single "Come Back to Me" was released as the 'Free Music Video of the Week' on the U.S. iTunes Store.
The documentary follows its previous chapter España, la primera globalización (2021) and gathers 50 experts from multiple Hispanic countries with the goal of refuting the "Spanish Black Legend" and offer "a renewed, truthful and visually powerful about how Spanish America actually emerged and developed".
Hikaru Utada (宇多田ヒカル, Utada Hikaru, born January 19, 1983), also known mononymously as Utada, [2] is a Japanese and American singer, songwriter, and producer. She [ a ] is considered to be one of the most influential and best-selling musical artists in Japan.
The documentary stated goal is to debunk the purported "Spanish Black Legend" and to portray little known aspects of the Spanish Empire.It features the presence of 39 historians, such as John Elliott, María Ángeles Pérez Samper, Ricardo García Cárcel, Ramón Tamames, Nigel Townson, Marcelo Gullo [], Carmen Iglesias, Elvira Roca Barea and Carlos Martínez Shaw.
Los Cadetes de Linares was a Mexican norteño band famous for their corridos, traditional ballad-style songs about social causes, criminals or heroes in the northern parts of Mexico. They appeared in various classic Mexican films and made many appearances on nationally syndicated programs in Mexico and the United States.
J.Lo did not hold back when honoring her man on "This Is Me … Now." The superstar gets very steamy singing about their sex life.
The song was written and co-produced by Utada herself, while Akira Miyake and the singer's father Teruzane Utada served as producers. Despite working recording in English under the name Cubic U, "Time Will Tell" is Utada's first Japanese recording, and was released after she enrolled into high school in Japan.
José Luis López may refer to: José Luis López Aranguren, Spanish philosopher, see Prince of Asturias Awards; José Luis López Rubio or José López Rubio, Spanish film writer and director; José Luis López Vázquez (1922–2009), Spanish film and TV actor; José Luis López (Costa Rican footballer), Costa Rican footballer