Selena Gomez is back in the top 10 on Billboard's Hot Latin Songs chart (dated April 5) as "Ojos Tristes," with Benny Blanco ...
The Marías were featured on the track, with lead vocalist María Zardoya singing the song’s Spanish second verse and joining ...
Billboard compares Jeanette's 1981 "El Muchacho de los Ojos Tristes" with Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco's "Ojos Tristes." ...
What are Selena Gomez's Ojos Tristes' lyrics about? Here's what Selena Gomez's 'Ojos Tristes' lyrics with The Marías mean in ...
Ojos Tristes' helped build a bridge between the two generations, quickly becoming a hit among younger listeners.
“I Said I Love You First” is the album’s opening interlude, featuring a tearful speech by the young Gomez to the cast and ...
The Spanish singer Jeanette, who rose to prominence in the Seventies and Eighties, says she loves Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco's play on her song.
This album isn’t just a comeback for Gomez; it’s a heartfelt reintroduction that feels entirely worth the wait.
Selena Gomez’s Spanish track ‘Ojos Tristes’ are a heartbreaking look at a past love. Read the lyrics and their English ...
“And it just felt like it was meant to be.” One of the set’s standout track is “Ojos Tristes,” a bilingual glam-pop track that features vocals from the Marías leader María ...
The fourth track, 'Ojos Tristes' ('Sad Eyes' in English) takes the chorus from Jeanette’s 1981 song 'El Muchacho de los Ojos Tristes' ('The Boy With Sad Eyes,' see an English translation here of ...