Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

La golondrina

Song From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

La golondrina (English: "The Swallow") is a song written in 1862 by Mexican physician Narciso Serradell Sevilla (1843–1910), who at the time was exiled to France due to the French intervention in Mexico.

Quick facts Song, Language ...
Remove ads

Background

The lyrics come from a poem written in Arabic by the last Abencerrages king of Granada, Aben Humeya, in a translation by Niceto de Zamacois, which Serradell found in a magazine used as packing material.[1]

La golondrina

The Spanish lyrics use the image of a migrating swallow to evoke sentiments of longing for the homeland. It became the signature song of the exiled Mexicans. The song was recorded in 1906[2] by Señor Francisco.[3][4]

Remove ads

She Wears My Ring

Felice & Boudleaux Bryant wrote lyrics in English, as "She Wears My Ring", which was first recorded by Jimmy Sweeney (also known as Jimmy Bell) in 1960. Other notable cover versions are by:

Solomon King recording

Solomon King recorded the song in 1968 and it became an instant international hit.

Charts

More information Chart (1968), Peak position ...

Recordings in other languages

The song, recorded by 13-year-old Heintje, became a German number-one hit in August 1968 (title: Du sollst nicht weinen, "Thou shalt not cry").

Anita Hegerland version

In June 1970, the 9-year-old Norwegian singer Anita Hegerland became a famed child singer with a recording[8] in Swedish (Mitt sommarlov, "My summer break") that topped the Swedish best selling chart Kvällstoppen for five weeks and Svensktoppen for seven weeks[9] as well as the Norwegian singles chart for three weeks.[10] At age 10, she became Norway's first artist to sell over a million copies[11] and she now is one of the best-selling solo singers in Norway, with sales of more than 7 million albums and singles. Hegerland's songs have been released on nearly 30 million albums worldwide, most of which are with Roy Black and Mike Oldfield.

Charts

More information Chart (1970), Peak positions ...
Remove ads
  • The song figures prominently in the 1969 film The Wild Bunch, directed by Sam Peckinpah and scored by Jerry Fielding. The local people serenade the bandit protagonists with it as they leave Angel's Mexican village.

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads