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Amante de lo Ajeno (English: Lover Of Other People's Things) is the second solo studio album by Mexican singer María José. The name is a play on words, as it is a cover album . It was released on 12 May 2009 on the Sei Track Musica label, a division of Grupo CIE , [ 1 ] and reached number 2 in the Mexican album charts.
"Lo Aprendí de Ti" (transl. "I Learned It From You") is the second single of the live album Primera Fila: Hecho Realidad by American duo Ha*Ash. The single was officially released on March 6, 2015. The music video of the song is the live performance by Ha*Ash in Estudios Churubusco, Mexico City on 7 July 2014.
Una Navidad a Mi Estilo: 2008: Yo No Sé Perdonarte 14 1 13 Soy: No Soy Quién 43 9 40 2009: Daría Mi Vida Por Ella - 31 - single only: Dime - 10 - Soy: Yo Confío en Ti - - 33 Muy Personal: Mírame 41 1 35 Yo Mismo: 2010: Lo Que Me Hiciste (featuring Jorge Celedón) - 37 - Canto A Puerto Rico - - - Single Only: 2011: Si Tú Me Besas: 1 1 1 ...
Jaime Altozano was born in 1993 [2] in the Ciudad Lineal district of Madrid. [3] He studied piano at the Arturo Soria Professional Conservatory of Music in Madrid, completed two years at the Complutense University of Madrid with a double-major in Mathematics and Physics, [4] and studied music production at Escuela Creativa de Madrid.
Carlos Alberto Pizarro (born March 18, 1975), known professionally as Alberto Stylee, is a Puerto Rican reggaetón singer and songwriter. While his career began with hip hop and reggae-influenced music, he is most famous for being one of the early pioneers of the reggaetón genre, with hits such as "Posición" with Daddy Yankee (1997), "Vengo Acabando" (1997), "Perros y Gatos" (2002), "Sin Ti ...
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.
"Corazón Espinado" (Spanish pronunciation: [koɾaˈson espiˈnaðo]; transl. "Thorned Heart") is a song by Latin rock band Santana featuring Latin rock group Maná.
When que is used as the object of a preposition, the definite article is added to it, and the resulting form (el que) inflects for number and gender, resulting in the forms el que, la que, los que, las que and the neuter lo que. Unlike in English, the preposition must go right before the relative pronoun "which" or "whom":