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Vicente Fernández Gómez (17 February 1940 – 12 December 2021) was a Mexican mariachi singer, actor and film producer. Nicknamed "Chente" (short for Vicente), "El Charro de Huentitán" (The Charro from Huentitán), [1] "El Ídolo de México" (The Idol of Mexico), [2] and "El Rey de la Música Ranchera" (The King of Ranchera Music), [3] Fernández started his career as a busker, and went on ...
The theater housed vaudeville, silent films, and talkies before it became a Mexican cinema house under the Olivos Family. Louie Olivos Jr. brought talent of Mexican cinema to the Yost including Antonio Aguilar, and Vicente Fernández to name some. He also brought Ike and Tina Turner and Sonny and Cher to the Yost.
The song has been covered by various artists, including Vicente Fernández - often considered the most well-known version of "El Rey" - his son Alejandro Fernández, Luis Miguel, and Maná. Other versions
Mano A Mano: Tangos a La Manera de Vicente Fernández: Released: 2014 — — — 11: 3 Muriendo de Amor: Released: 2015 — — — 1: 1 Un Azteca en el Azteca: Released: 2016 — — — 9: 1 AMPROFON: 2× Platinum [7] Más Romántico Que Nunca: Released: 2018 — — — 31: 8 A Mis 80's: Released: 2020; Won a Grammy award under the Best ...
Necesito de Ti (I need you) is a studio album released by Mexican singer Vicente Fernández on July 7, 2009 by Sony BMG. [1] The album earned the Grammy Award for Best Regional Mexican Album . [ 2 ]
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El Ídolo de Mexico is an album by Mexican singer Vicente Fernández, released in 1974 by CBS. [1] [2] In 2015, it was selected by Billboard magazine as one of the "50 Essential Latin Albums of the Last 50 Years". [3]
In Cinema of Solitude: A Critical Study of Mexican Film, 1967–1983, Charles Ramírez Berg mentions the film together with El albañil (The Bricklayer, 1975) and El Coyote y la Bronca (Coyote and Bronca, 1980) as examples of films of Vicente Fernández in which "the Fernández character is helped by women, and he is able to accept it without feeling that he is losing his manhood," because ...