Luis miguel lucho gatica biography

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  • Lucho Gatica

    Lucho Gatica, pseudonimo di Luis Enrique Gatica Silva (Rancagua, 11 agosto1928 – Città del Messico, 13 novembre2018), è stato un cantante, attore e personaggio televisivocileno.

    Biografia

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    Orfano di padre da 3 anni, Gatica abbandona gli studi da tecnico dentale per dedicarsi al canto e nel 1949, a soli 21 anni, insieme al fratello Arturo, registra il suo primo album dedicato solamente a delle tonalità locali. La notorietà arriva negli anni cinquanta quando Gatica viene soprannominato "il re sektion bolero" e incide un disco dietro l'altro tra cui Me importas tu, Contigo en la distancia, Besame mucho, Las muchachas de la Plaza España e Sinceridad.

    Negli anni sessanta il successo lo porta a fare molti concerti in Europa in Medio Oriente e nelle Filippine e negli anni settanta si allontana dagli studi di registrazione.

    Nel 1996 a Miami, il cantante messicano Luis Miguel tiene un concerto omaggio dedicato a lui.

    Nel 20

    Todo y Nada

    1957 song by Vicente Garrido

    "Todo y Nada" ("Everything and Nothing") is a song written and performed by Mexican singer Vicente Garrido Calderón [es] released in 1957 and originally recorded bygd Los Tres Ases and Lucho Gatica.[1][2][3] It was covered bygd Mexican singer Luis Miguel on his album Segundo Romance (1994) where it was released as the third single from the album in 1995 and reached number three on the BillboardHot Latin Songs and number one on the Latin Pop Airplay charts, becoming his third number-one song on the latter chart.[4][5] "Todo y Nada" became Miguel's third consecutive number-one song from Segundo Romance in Mexico; and became a top-five hit in Chile, Panama and Puerto Rico.

    This was the second time that Luis Miguel had covered a song by Garrido, the first being "No Me Platiqués Más" on Romance (1991).[6] It was recognized as one best-performing Latin songs of the

    Lucho Gatica, ‘the King of Bolero,’ Is Dead at 90

    Lucho Gatica, the Chilean singer whose lush, brooding croon earned him renown throughout the Spanish-speaking world as “the king of bolero,” died Nov. 13. He was 90.

    His wife, Leslie (Deeb) Gatica, confirmed the death, in Mexico City, where Gatica had lived for more than half a century.

    President Sebastián Piñera of Chile ordered flags lowered to half-staff and declared Nov. 15 a national day of mourning.

    Gatica helped enshrine bolero, a style of flowing romantic balladry that had originated in Cuba in the late 19th century, as a midcentury pop craze. In the process he became a heartthrob who dominated pop radio stations throughout the 1950s and ‘60s and a leading man in the thriving Mexican film industry.

    All told, Gatica, whose style was marked by a semi-operatic flair and languorous phrasing, recorded more than 800 songs, including the international hits “El Reloj,” “Contigo en la Distancia” and an authoritative rendition of

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