Soy
File:Ednitanazariosoy.jpg
Studio album by Ednita Nazario
Released October 27, 2009
Recorded 2009
Genre Latin Pop, Rock, Pop
Length 43:59
Label Sony BMG
Producer Tommy Torres, Sebastián Krys, Graeme Pleeth
Ednita Nazario chronology
Real... En Vivo
(2008)
Soy
(2009)
Desnuda
(2012)
Singles from Soy
  1. "Sin Querer[1]"
    Released: September 24, 2009
  2. "Confesados"
    Released: January 11, 2010
  3. "La Fuerza de un Te Quiero"
    Released: April 18, 2010
  4. "Se Que Voy A Reir"

"Soy" is the 21st studio album and 25 album recorded by Puerto Rican singer Ednita Nazario, it was released on October 27, 2009. As a rock musician and feel guidelines, Ednita never ceases to amaze with their musical selections. And this time, is joined by some of the most important composers of the industry, including Rafael Esparza, Tommy Thompson, Claudia Brant, Samo (rock pop group Camila), and Mark Portman.[1]

The Puerto Rican and also close friend of Ednita, Tommy Torres is also one of the outstanding producers who account this new album, scheduled to release October 27, 2009. Two other producers who collaborate with Ednita to make this project a flawless and memorable musical experience are Sebastian Krys and Graeme Pleeth.[1]

Contents

Track listing [link]

No. Title Composer Length
1. "Me Voy"   Erika Ender, Jonathan Mead, Rafael Esparza 3:50
2. "Sin Querer"   Rafael López, Samo 3:48
3. "Déjame Ser"   Erika Ender, David Levitt, Victor Indrizzo, Francisco Sondelli, Rafael Esparza 3:44
4. "Confesados"   Tommy Torres 4:06
5. "Sin Pausas"   Ednita Nazario, Rafael Esparza, Pedro Capó 3:38
6. "Intoxicándome"   Claudia Brant, Mark Portmann 3:49
7. "Dos Eternidades"   Nicole Witt, Cristian Zalles, Nick Carter, Gilles Godard, Andrew Fromm 3:54
8. "Yo Quiero Más"   Ednita Nazario, Rafael Esparza 3:36
9. "Soy Como Soy"   Iker Gastaminza, Cristian Zalles 3:20
10. "Mi Libertad"   Ednita Nazario, Jaime Ciero, Rafael Esparza 3:26
11. "Sé Que Voy A Reir"   Mauricio Gasca, Yoel Heríquez 3:13
12. "La Fuerza De Un Te Quiero"   Claudia Brant, Mark Portmann 3:42

Charts [link]

The album debuted at #1 on Billboard Top Latin Albums, becoming her third album to debut at that position. Also the album notched the highest first-week sales for a female Latin act so far this year,[when?] surpassing Nelly Furtado's first-week sales for Mi Plan.[2] The album so far[when?] has spent two weeks on top of the Billboard charts.

Chart (2009) Peak
position
Sales
U.S. Billboard 200 Albums 27[3]
16,000[4]
U.S. Billboard Top Latin Albums 1[5]
U.S. Billboard Latin Pop Albums 1[6]
Puerto Rico Top Albums 1
Preceded by
Sin Mirar Atrás by David Bisbal
U.S. Billboard Top Latin Albums number-one album
November 14, 2009 – November 21, 2009
Succeeded by
Paraíso Express by Alejandro Sanz

Awards [link]

2010 Billboard Latin Music Awards [link]

Category Result
Top Latin Albums Artist of the Year, Female Nominated
Latin Pop Album of the Year Nominated

References [link]


https://wn.com/Soy_(Ednita_Nazario_album)

Soy (Cynthia album)

Soy is the debut CD by Cynthia. It was released on June 26, 2006. She said that the album 'is to sing in the car, or in a den at home and the single 'Soy' is a way to go to the public and say that I accept'. With the collaboration of Yahir the album won first place in the Desafio de Estrellas.

Track listing

  • "Soy" – 3:41
  • "Amarte A Fuego Lento" – 4:34
  • "Deja Que La Vida Te Despeine" – 5:02
  • "Eso Lo Que Llamaste Amor" – 3:06
  • "Mexico Ponte De Pie" – 4:32
  • "No Me Vuelvas Loca" – 3:30
  • "Y Ahora Vienes Tú" – 3:28
  • "Nunca Te Dejare" – 4:03
  • "Dime" – 3:42
  • "La Ventana" – 3:44
  • "Sin Ti" – 3:27
  • "Olvidando Y Recordando (Feat. Yahir) 4:16
  • "Soy (Version Pop) (Bonus Track)" - 3:34
  • "Olvidando Y Recordando (Remix) (Bonus Track)" – 4:22
  • References

    Soy (Víctor Manuelle album)

    Soy is the twelfth album of Puerto Rican Salsa singer Víctor Manuelle. The album was released on June 10, 2008. It produced two singles, "Yo No Se Perdonarte" and "No Soy Quien".

    Track listings

  • Yo Te Quería Querer
  • Yo No Sé Perdonarte (Salsa)
  • Dime (Salsa)
  • El Amor Es Un Casino (ft. Tego Calderón)
  • No Soy Quién (Salsa)
  • Mi Salsa
  • No Me Niegues la Vida
  • Mi Mejor Amiga
  • No Soy Quién (Ballad)
  • Dime (Ballad)
  • Yo No Sé Perdonarte (Ballad)
  • Singles

  • "Yo No Se Perdonarte"
  • "No Soy Quien"
  • Charts

    Awards/Nominations

    See also

  • List of number-one Billboard Tropical Albums from the 2000s
  • Mach (kernel)

    Mach (/mʌk/) is a kernel developed at Carnegie Mellon University to support operating system research, primarily distributed and parallel computing. Mach is often mentioned as one of the earliest examples of a microkernel. However, not all versions of Mach are microkernels. Mach's derivatives are the basis of the modern operating system kernels in GNU Hurd and Apple's products OS X, iOS, tvOS and watchOS.

    The project at Carnegie Mellon ran from 1985 to 1994, ending with Mach 3.0, which is a true microkernel. Mach was developed as a replacement for the kernel in the BSD version of Unix, so no new operating system would have to be designed around it. Experimental research on Mach appears to have ended, although Mach and its derivatives exist within a number of commercial operating systems. These include NeXTSTEP and OpenStep, upon which OS X is based—all using the XNU operating system kernel which incorporates an earlier, non-microkernel, Mach as a major component. The Mach virtual memory management system was also adopted in 4.4BSD by the BSD developers at CSRG, and appears in modern BSD-derived Unix systems, such as FreeBSD.

    Makhai

    In Greek mythology, the Makhai or Machai, Machae (Greek: Μάχαι, "battles"; singular: Μάχη Machê or Makhê) were the daemons (spirits) of battle and combat, and were sons or daughters of Eris, siblings to other vicious personifications like the Hysminai, the Androktasiai, and the Phonoi.

    Mythology

    The daemons Homados (Battle-Noise), Alala (War-Cry), Proioxis (Onrush), Palioxis (Backrush) and Kydoimos (Confusion) were closely associated with the Makhai.

    They were accompanied in battlefields by other deities and spirits associated with war and death, such as Ares, Phobos, Deimos, the Keres, Polemos, Enyo, and their mother Eris.

    Popular culture

  • The Makhai make an appearance in Wrath of the Titans as Hades and later Cronus' troops. The Makhai are depicted as a humanoid creature with two torsos back to back with each other which enables them to attack more than one person.
  • In The Blood of Olympus, Asclepius used the Makhai and the Pylosian Mint in order to formulate a physician's cure.
  • In the top down ARPG "Titan Quest: Immortal Throne", Makhai are enemies, that can be found in the final world of the game, "Hades".
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    A guiding light

    by: Smog

    The sun peaked at noon
    I watched it hoping it would rise
    Just a little higher
    And give me a guiding light
    A guiding light
    I must admit I felt some relief
    When the sun began to sink
    I mean who really wants to see
    Things in blinding white
    Blinding white
    It grows dark
    I feel my way home
    Sleep
    Sleep if you can sleep
    Me I'll be staying up
    Long into the night
    Trying to prove wrong
    All the statements I made
    All the statements I just made
    A guiding light
    You were born in the middle of the night




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