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El Gato Negro" (The Black Cat) is a very popular corrido whose words and music were written by Salomé Gutiérrez, R. and published by San Antonio Music Publishers, Inc., In 1987 it was performed by Tejano music singer Ruben Ramos and his band The Mexican Revolution .
"Gato de Noche" (English: "Night Cat") is a song by Puerto Rican rappers and singers Ñengo Flow and Bad Bunny. It was originally released on December 22, 2022, by Rimas Entertainment, as the first single from Ñengo Flow's seventh studio album, Real G 4 Life, Vol. 4 (2024).
The gato (Spanish for cat) is a style of Argentine music and an associated dance. It is a very popular folk dance in the country. It is a very popular folk dance in the country. Its rhythm is like the chacarera , but its structure is different.
Ruben Ramos, also known as El Gato Negro, is an American Tejano music performer. Beginning his music career in the late 1960s, Ruben's fame as has grown throughout the years as he formed his own distinct sound of music. [1] In March 1998, Ruben was inducted into the Tejano Music Awards Hall of Fame and later won Best Male Vocalist in 1999. [2]
The group was started in the wake of an earlier band Los Gatos Salvajes, who had shared two the same members, in 1967.They recorded their debut single "La balsa" / "Ayer nomás", which turned into an unpredicted large scale hit in the Argentine winter of 67, selling over 200,000 copies, leading to their full-length debut later that year.
The leading Chilean rock band of the 1990s were Los Tres, who mixed styles like rock (from rockabilly to grunge), jazz and cueca (Chile's folkloric national dance) and became particularly successful in Mexico, [36] The albums Los Tres (1991), La Espada & la Pared (1995) and Fome (1997) are considered among the most influential albums of rock en ...
Gato Loco is a New York City based band formed in 2006 by Stefan Zeniuk & formerly produced/conducted by Clifton Hyde. [1] [2] [3] Gato Loco CocoNino has been positively reviewed by the press. [4] The band was interviewed in 2011 by Radio France while on their European tour. [5]
[8] [9] "The Woman I Remember" is a tribute to Barbieri's late wife. [10] "Blue Gala" is dedicated to the physical therapist who aided Barbieri after his 1995 heart surgery. [11] "Mystica" is an interpretation of Erik Satie's Gymnopédies. [12] Barbieri regretted that the album was around an hour in running time, which he thought was too long. [13]