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Danny Berrios (born October 29, 1961) is an American Christian music singer-songwriter and televangelist. Son of Puerto Rican preacher Jose Pepito Berrios and Clara Berrios. Background
"El Son de la Negra" (lit. The Song of the Black Woman) is a Mexican folk song , originally from Tepic, Nayarit , [ 1 ] before its separation from the state of Jalisco , and best known from an adaptation by Jalisciense musical composer Blas Galindo in 1940 for his suite Sones de mariachi .
The song's refrain, "bamboleo, bambolea, porque mi vida yo la prefier vivir así", translates to: "Swaying, swaying, because I prefer to live my life this way." Part of the song is an adaptation of the 1980 Venezuelan folk song "Caballo Viejo" by Simón Díaz. [1] The refrain is based on Bamboleô by André Filho, recorded by Carmen Miranda in ...
The song "Que nadie sepa mi sufrir", was composed in 1936 by Ángel Cabral, with Spanish lyrics by Enrique Dizeo, both of Argentine origin, as a Peruvian waltz.Peruvian waltz, also known as vals criollo ("creole waltz"), was a popular genre in Hispanic America between the 1930s and 1950s, and the song, initially covered by Argentine singer Hugo del Carril, became a regional hit.
Daniel Balderrama Espinoza (born March 12, 2004), [1] better known by his stage name DannyLux, is an American singer-songwriter.He is well known for his hit song with Eslabón Armado called "Jugaste y Sufrí" which introduced him to the music industry, becoming one of the biggest new names in the regional Mexican genre.
"Jugaste y Sufri" (English: "You Played and I Suffered") is a song by regional Mexican group Eslabon Armado featuring American regional Mexican singer-songwriter DannyLux
Vive la Fête was founded in 1997 when Danny Mommens (then still a member of dEUS) met Els Pynoo at a party hosted by or for her sister.Mommens had previously been an acquaintance of Pynoo's sister, who had photographed Els nude and later shown the picture to him.
"Aguanilé" (Watered Down) is a song taken from Roberto Faz's song "Para gozar la vida" by American-Puerto Rican trombonist Willie Colón and Puerto Rican singer Héctor Lavoe and being recorded by themselves as the first single from their seventh studio album El Juicio released in 1972. [1]