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The Limeliters on their 1960 album The Limeliters.
Kathy Kirby, whose 1963 UK hit (#17) "You're the One" set English lyrics, by Marcel Stellman, to the melody of "Malagueña Salerosa".Yugoslav and Montenegrin singer Nikola Karović recorded Malagueña in 1964 as a single album, and it sold more than 1 million copies.Harry James on his 1966 album The Ballads And The Beat! ( Dot DLP 3669 and DLP 25669).The Texan folksinger Tish Hinojosa sang it on her 1991 album Aquella Noche.John Gary, American vocalist, sang it on the 1967 albums Spanish Moonlight and Carnegie Hall Concert.French Latino on the album Suerte, 2013.José Feliciano (who performed both this song and Malagueña by Ernesto Lecuona.).Plácido Domingo on his 1999 album 100 Años de Mariachi, which won a Grammy Award for Best Mexican-American Performance PLACIDO DOMINGO LA MALAGUENA SALEROSA.The Italian band El Cuento de la Chica y la Tequila recorded "Malagueña Salerosa" on their 2013 EP The Wounded Healer.Chitãozinho & Xororó in 2006 on their album Vida Marvada.Tex-mex band Chingón recorded it for the 2004 soundtrack of Kill Bill: Volume 2 Kill Bill 2 Soundtrack – Malaguena Salerosa.Bud & Travis on their 1959 album Bud and Travis.The Brothers Comatose & Mariachi Oliveros 2022 – YouTube.Luiz Bonfá on his 1965 album The Brazilian Scene and his 1965 collaboration with singer Maria Toledo, Braziliana.James Booker on the posthumous album Spiders On The Keys: Live At The Maple Leaf.Ray Boguslav in 1961 on the album Curfew shall not ring tonight Ray Boguslav – Curfew Shall Not Ring Tonight – MF359.Alla Bayanova was recorded in Romania in 70 years on long-playing record.
#COMPOSITOR DE LA LLORONA MOVIE#
In the opening title sequence of the movie Once Upon a Time in Mexico, Antonio Banderas is seen "playing" on guitar a version of Malagueña Salerosa, recorded by Chingon, members of group Del Castillo of Austin, Texas and director/producer/editor Robert Rodriguez, with orchestral backing. Avenged Sevenfold released a version of the song in 2017 Avenged Sevenfold – Malagueña Salerosa, adding metal elements to the song. Nancy Ames on her 1964 all Spanish album This Is The Girl That Is. Angela Aguilar (granddaughter of Antonio Aguilar & daughter of Pepe Aguilar) 2021. This song became known internationally and has been recorded by such artists as: Rafael Méndez on his album Mendez and Almeida Together. Tríos huastecos that have played this song include: Other known mariachi versions of the song were recorded by: Quite a few versions of the song feature vocal gymnastics by whoever sings them, particularly the stretching of vowels such as the "e" sound in the gentilic 'Malagueña' for as long as the singer can hold the note. With Huapangos or Son Huastecos, the falsetto technique is used to great effect, as in David Záizar's version. But the most famous version was made by Miguel Aceves Mejía with his mariachi. Many have recorded and played this song, in particular Tríos huastecos, Mariachis and Bolero Trios. don Nicandro Castillo wrote that several tunes from la Huasteca which in decades past were known as huapangos, composed by Elpidio Ramírez, Roque Ramírez and Pedro Galindo, were actually anonymous songs, as was the case of Cielito Lindo and La Malagueña, which like La Guasanga or El Sacamandú, were in the public domain, written "long before the construction of the Cathedral of Huejutla". Malagueña Salerosa is attributed to Elpidio Ramírez and Pedro Galindo, published by Peer International in 1947 (monitored by BMI), although Mexican composer Nicandro Castillo questions the validity of that authorship. The song is that of a man telling a woman (from Málaga, Spain) how beautiful she is, and how he would love to be her man, but that he understands her rejecting him for being too poor. Malagueña Salerosa - also known as La Malagueña - is a well-known Son Huasteco or Huapango song from Mexico, which has been covered more than 200 times by recording artists. YouTube Art Track provided by RCA Records Not to be confused with Malagueña (song), the sixth movement of the Suite Andalucia by Ernesto Lecuona.