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In 1990, Burbujas de Amor was rated 8th of the Top Hot Latin Tracks in the United States by Billboard magazine. [2] It was named Song of the Year of 1990 by Billboard's Latin music critics. [3] The song won Tropical/Salsa Song of the Year at Premios Lo Nuestro 1991. [4] In 2015, it was placed 8th on Billboard's Top 50 Best Latin Songs of All ...
Grandes Éxitos de Juan Luis Guerra y 440 or simply Grandes Éxitos is a compilation album of Dominican singer-songwriter Juan Luis Guerra, and his band 440 released in July 1995 by Karem Records. It contained Guerra's fifteen biggest hits from 1988 to 1994 on the original version and from the albums Mudanza y Acarreo (1985) to Fogarate!
Colección Romántica is a compilation album by Dominican songwriter and musician Juan Luis Guerra and 4.40. It was released in November 21, 2000 and February 6, 2001 in the United States by Karen Records. [2] [3] It is a dual album compilation including 20 of the group's classic songs remastered and re-recorded as ballads. [4]
[39] [40] It peaked at number 5 and 2 in Puerto Rico and Venezuela Airplay. [41] [42] "La Bilirrubina" was the second single released from the album. It reached number nine on the Hot Latin Songs chart and number 2 in Peru. [43] The third single, "Burbujas de Amor", was the most successful single from the album. It peaked at number two on the ...
Radio Guira was released as a "gift to the fans". [3] The concept is based on a fictional radio station that Guerra titled "4:40 FM". According to Rolling Stone, it was partially influenced by a radio show called Radio Viva that he had years ago, with different languages announcing the time and different recipes, as well as his longtime love of the güira, a percussion instrument common in ...
[3] One of the album's merengue tracks is "El Costo de la Vida", which is a Spanish-language adaptation of the 1988 soukous song "Kimia Eve" by Congolese band Loketo. [3] [9] The band's lead musician and song composer Diblo Dibala makes an appearance on the track playing the soukous guitar for Guerra's cover. [9]
As in the previous season, Marley is the host of the show. This season introduced singer and actress Rochi Igarzabal as the digital host of the show. All four coaches from the previous season returned: Venezuelan-Argentine singer and songwriter Ricardo Montaner, folk singer Soledad Pastorutti, pop singer Lali Espósito, and Venezuelan Latin pop and reggaeton duo Mau y Ricky.
"Ojalá Que Llueva Café" (English "Hope That It Rains Coffee") is the lead single by the Dominican artist Juan Luis Guerra and his band 4:40 from their fourth studio album of the same title. It was released on 1989 by Karen Records and 1990 in Europe by Ariola Records.