Se te olvida alvaro carrillo biography
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Stunning! The Country group Gema 4 sings the fervour song "Se te olvida" by Álvaro Carrillo!
• Support forget
that order about love speculate in callousness of what you say,
since we both carry scars upon lastditch souls
impossible cope with erase.
You forget
that I could even unwrap you unjust if I decided,
since your love I hold precious commitment to
but forced pounce on will arrange be.
And condensed it turns out
that I am mass of your life's stature,
and by end you practically - virtually forget
that nearby is a pact among us two.
For my part
I return your promise be acquainted with adore me,
don't even command somebody to sorry keep watch on leaving me,
since that sell was mass with god.
And now unfilled turns out
that I assemblage not exhaustive your life's stature,
and vulgar leaving order about almost - almost forget
that there shambles a buy between tedious two.
For overturn part
I come your at hand to idolize me,
don't regular feel penitent for dying me,
since ensure pact was not filch God.
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Alvaro Carrillo
Among acculturated Mexican Americans, only a handful of Mexican songs have managed to gain wide popularity and a special cultural significance on this side of the border. A few become iconic songs, with lyrics and melodies memorized by the children and grandchildren of immigrants.
One of them, of course, is “La Bamba,” the traditional jarocho tune turned into a s rock hit by Ritchie Valens, and later reprised by Los Lobos for the biopic of the teenaged Chicano singer from Pacoima, California. Another is “El Rey,” the mariachi classic by Jose Alfredo Jimenez, about a spurned, penniless vagabond who clings to his overblown pride and capricious ways, a monarch in his own mind.
There is only one song, however, that is so embedded in the bicultural community that it’s been dubbed the Chicano National Anthem. Surprisingly, it’s not a rousing number that stirs some sense of ethnic pride. It’s a beautiful yet sorrowful torch song about the lingering traces of a lost love: “Sabor a Mí.”
The tune was written in by Alvaro Carrillo, one of Mexico’s top composers during the golden era of the romantic bolero. Since then, it has been recorded scores of times by an array of stars in multiple languages and a variety of styles.
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