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Por alto que esté el cielo en el mundo, por hondo que sea el mar profundo, no habrá una barrera en el mundo que mi amor profundo no pueda romper. Among the following verses a frequently cited phrase is "Amor es el pan de la vida, amor es la copa divina, (English: "Love is the bread of life, love is the divine cup") amor es un algo sin nombre ...
At the end of 2003, he began Por el mundo, as a replacement to MundoShow and that would last until 2007. In 2004, he made Odisea, en busca del escarabajo dorado , from Costa Rica , which would later have two more seasons: Odisea, en busca del tesoro perdido (2005) and Odisea, aventura argentina (2007).
Grupo Yndio is a Mexican band from Hermosillo, Sonora founded in 1972, [1] by some of the members of the dissolute band Los Pulpos.. The band is known for Spanish covers of English-language pop hits, but with a distinctive Grupero style.
"En un mundo nuevo" (Spanish pronunciation: [en um ˈmundo ˈnweβo]; English: "In a New World") is a song recorded by Spanish singer Karina with music composed by Rafael Trabucchelli and lyrics written by Tony Luz . It represented Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 1971 held in Dublin, placing second.
San Antonio de las Vueltas, also known as Vueltas, [1] is a village and consejo popular ("people's council", i.e. hamlet) in central northern Cuba, belonging to the municipality of Camajuaní, Villa Clara Province. It is the most populated village in the municipality after Camajuaní.
Que vueltas da la Vida is the third studio album recorded by Mexican singer-songwriter Reyli Barba. This album was released by Sony Music Latin on 9 June 2009. Track listing
Rhythms del Mundo is a nonprofit collaborative album, which fuses an all-star cast of Cuban musicians including Ibrahim Ferrer and Omara Portuondo of the Buena Vista Social Club with tracks from US, UK and Irish artists such as Dido, Arctic Monkeys, U2, Coldplay, Sting, Jack Johnson, Maroon 5, Franz Ferdinand, Kaiser Chiefs and others.
A Hancock owned and captained vessel following Velero II, Oaxaca, had carried twelve passengers including two representatives of the California Academy of Sciences on a voyage as far as the Galápagos Islands in 1927. [5] In 1931 Hancock had a new vessel constructed and returned to the name Velero with that being the third of the name. [5]