Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In the song, Miguel chants: "suave como me mata tu mirada, suave es el perfume de tu piel, suave son tus caricias, como siempre te soñé, como siempre te soñé" ("smooth, how you look kills, smooth, it is the perfume of your skin, smooth, it is your caress as I've always dreamed of you"). [12]
The following year-end charts were elaborated by Mejía Barquera, based on weekly charts that were published on the magazine Selecciones musicales as compiled on Roberto Ayala's 1962 book "Musicosas: manual del comentarista de radio y televisión"; those charts were, according to Ayala, based on record sales, jukebox plays, radio and television airplay, and sheet music sales [a]. [6]
40 is the twenty-eighth studio album by Colombian salsa group Grupo Niche, released on May 29, 2020, through PPM Records. [1] The album was produced by José Aguirre and marks the group's forty years of career.
These are the lists of the top 100 songs of 2018 in Mexico according to Monitor Latino. [1] Monitor Latino issued two year-end General charts: one which ranked the songs by their number of Spins (Tocadas) on the Mexican radio, and the other ranked the songs by their estimated audience.
[7] [8] Crespo's version was awarded on the tropical/salsa field at the 2002 ASCAP Latin Awards. [9] Colombian rock singer Juanes also covered it on his second studio album Un Día Normal which features Arroyo's vocals from the original recording. [10] Puerto Rican reggaeton artist Don Omar sampled "La Noche" on his 2003 song "Dile". [11]
All the while he continued to compose songs. In 1960, he moved to New York City and worked for the newspaper "Diario/La Prensa" as a sports columnist. In 1965, Curet Alonso met salsa singer Joe Quijano who recorded Alonso's Efectivamente which became a hit. Curet Alonso developed a unique style of his own which is known as "salsa with a ...
The following year-end charts were elaborated by Mejía Barquera, based on weekly charts that were published on the magazines Radiolandia for the years 1944 to 1946 and Selecciones musicales for 1948 and 1949 (the latter were taken from Roberto Ayala's 1962 book "Musicosas: manual del comentarista de radio y televisión" which compiled the ...
Juan Pablo Pacheco Knipping was born on 25 March 1935 in Santiago de los Caballeros, a city in the Dominican Republic. [5] He inherited his passion for music from his father, Rafael Azarías Pacheco, who was the leader and clarinetist of the Orquesta Santa Cecilia.