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Heard A Mexican Song In Banda Style And First Sentence Was

Anyone know any good Mexican/Banda songs about missing someone you like?

Banda El Recodo - Te Quiero A Morir, Tus Palabras, Me Gusta Todo de Ti
La Arrolladora Banda El Limon - Nina de Mi Corazon, Como Pez en el Agua, La Culpable just for starters. However, there aren't really songs like "I sort of like you," or " I like you a lot" .... these are pretty strong love songs. Hard to think of anything banda that doesn't come on real strong honestly. But then te quiero, te quiero is hardly just liking someone either. Te Extrano by Xtreme is a I miss you song, but very strong in the love you so much I am suffering when you're not here kind of way. And it is bachata, not banda. Arrolladora - Sobre Mis Pies another banda love song.

Is this English sentence correct? "I’ve heard that song for the first time last week.?

No, the perfect tense is incorrect here, since the time is very specific. You could say "I've heard that song before" [not specific] or "I heard that song for the first time last week" [specific time, simple past].

It's not just that you don't "need" the word 'have'. It would be wrong to use it.

I wonder what other latinos (Cubans, PRs, Dominicans, Central and South Americans) think about Mexican music?

Yes this question is to pretty much the "Latinos/Hispanics" that aren't Mexican but are from other parts of Latin America, like Puerto Ricans, Cubans, Dominicans, Colombians, Venezuelans, Argentines, Chileans, heck even Spaniards (even though there from Europe)

I would like to know what they think of Mexican music. And by what I mean by Mexican music, I mean that traditional Mexican music like Mariachi, Corridos, Bandas, Duranguense stuff like that.

Do you feel annoyed when you are out in the parking lot and they fully blast their music of their favorite song by Banda Arrolladora, or Los Tigeres del Norte.

Or do you actually enjoy it? or in between, what are your thoughts?

What do central and southern Mexicans think about northern Mexicans?

This is how they picture us:Squalling about anything.We’re considered rustic people that still solve issue with gun duels instead of talking like civilized beings. Also ostentatious and CHEAP, presumably we never want to let go of money. They think we all wear cowboy boots and cowboy hats.People are generally considered to be better looking in the north. So southerners love it when our girls visit, but not so much with guys.They make fun of our northern accents. Believe we are all involved in agriculture or animal husbandry, hard-working desert people with unquestionably strong and disciplined labour ethics and in rare ocations considered brave for populating extentions of land previously owned by agressive indians.Northern mexicans are steretyped as being more harsh, rude, loud, but at the same time look for any excuse to make carne asada. “Making carne asada” of course is more than just a barbeque, it’s an entire ritual that inherently involves drinking beer with either friends or strangers.Imagine a typical texan, loud and proud, they may come off as rude but have huge hearts. Someone you know where he’s from as soon as you hear him speak a cowboy-ish accent (remember Mexico’s North is the US’s south). This is more-or-less what the rest of Mexico considers us.Northen Mexican music is very particular, and northen mexicans are believed to be obssesed with it. It involves folk ensembles playing characteristical instruments and is popular in both rural and urban areas. Some examples include Ramón Ayala, Intocable, Los Cadetes de Linares, Los Alegres de Terán, Los Tigres del Norte, Los Huracanes del Norte.Then there are the people who believe the territory of Baja California and Sonora belong to the U.S. -I’m not kidding, there are fellow mexicans that believe they need a passport to visit Los Cabos - I though it was a roumor but I’ve asked people from central Mexico who have confirmed this misconception.

What grammar rule makes "I heard him sing the song" correct, but "I heard him sang the song" wrong?

drshorty's got it, but maybe this will help clarify things a tiny bit.

Note that you do NOT say "I heard him sings a song". In other words you are NOT using the present tense form of the verb, as you may have thought, and as some replies state. (The tense forms, with their endings, are "finite" verb forms. The simple form without endings [at least in English] is the "infinitive".)

I agree that you should view the clause "him sing a song" as a disinct piece. That is, the whole clause is the OBJECT of "I heard".

On a related note...though "sing" is quite correct, it is possible what you want to say is "I heard him singing a song". The difference is not always great --"sing" emphasizes the simple fact, "singing" emphasizes the process. I bring it up as another example of how the object clause ("him singing a song") does not take the 'finite' verb forms.

Again, the construction you use for the object in these sorts of sentences uses a verb form that focuses on the verbal ACTION itself, NOT on when it took place (tense). That is why you don't use the finite verb forms (which indicate tense/when it happened). In the instance you give, you use an infinitive; in the second case, a gerund (the -ing verb form).

Is Mexican music just a rip off of German polka music?

i have not heard the Mexican one. yet there is a few probability: a million. Inculturation - one in each and every of them undertake the way of existence of the different; 2. with information from twist of destiny - they have an same heritage of challenge and challenge on that style of track that's create an same theory then way of existence and ofcourse, track. 3. perchance it really is basically basically a mexican listening on German Polka wish this help Bless You

Will listening to Spanish music help me learn the language faster?

Yes, it can!Music has this magical ability to worm its way into our brains and cement itself there. Whether you want to admit it or not, you still know all of those nursery rhymes you learned as a child. (Source: Learn Spanish with Music)Luckily, this powerful property of music is universal, which makes it a great tool for acquiring a second language.Recent research shows that students who learned a language with music were better able to recall and use vocabulary than students that did not. This applied to both children AND adult learners.Spanish in particular has some great music you can learn from. You can find a list of genres with a list of suggested artists here: The Secret to Learning Spanish with Music - NegringaDon’t make the mistake of listening to a song over and over again without understanding it.This is fine in the beginning so you get used to the singer’s voice and pronunciation, but eventually you will need to look up the words.Learning language with music is only effective if you know what you are listening to.If you listen to a song a million times and understand nothing, your Spanish skills won’t improve too drastically. To use songs as a learning tool you need to familiarize yourself with the lyrics.

How can you describe the different types of Mexican music?

Religious Music - visit the churchesSecular Music - Category:Mexican styles of music - WikipediaMexico's Best Music: Discover Tejano, Norteno, Banda, and MoreTypes of Mexican Music | eHow

What's the most popular music in Mexico?

Basically, two major types of regional music exist in Mexico, in my opinion.One of them is the mariachi. Mariachi music is the most folkloric type of music used in Mexico. A mariachi band would feature some violinists, musicians who play large guitar, and musicians who play smaller guitars, along with some singers. They are often used in festivals, parties, and other social events in Mexico. They are most frequent on holidays like Christmas and the Grito de Dolores (September 16—Mexican Independence Day). Common mariachi songs that are mainstays include “El Jarabe Tapatio” and “Chiapanecas”. These songs were so popular by baseball players in Mexico that it spread like wildfire into the United States and a lot of American baseball organists especially in the late 20th century used such Mexican songs as rally cries for their teams. But in a lot of regions of Mexico, the mainstay mariachi piece is “La Negra”, trumping “El Jarabe Tapatio” as the number one used mariachi song in Mexico. Linda Ronstadt added her love of mariachi songs from her father, and led to “Canciones de mi Padre” (songs of my father), and brought mariachi songs right into the American music scape. This album featured the famous “La Charreada” (or “a party in the style of a Mexican rodeo”), which made Linda Ronstadt famous and shocked the whole Hispanic world. (It is very saddening that Linda Ronstadt is not able to sing anymore due to Parkinson’s disease.)The second one is the cumbia. Cumbia’s history in Mexico might have been inspired by Selena Quintanilla, who made some of her cumbia songs famous, but other famous Mexican artists, especially Thalia, brought a sort of reinforced resurgence of it. It is a bit of an offshoot of the type of cumbia dance and music seen in Colombia especially during the explosion of Colombia’s salsa in the 1980s which lead to the “cumbia” sound in Colombia which eventually spread to Mexico. The rhythm of the Mexican cumbia is known for the strong thump of the low bongo on beats 1 and 3 and it is used in such Mexican regional folk dances as the “banda” and the “quebradita.” Moreover, Thalia made such cumbia songs as “La Piel Morena” (Brown Skin) and “Amor a la Mexicana” (Love Mexican-Style) world famous in not only Mexico, but also the Hispanic world in particular, in the late 1990s. Mexican cumbia’s dance style is a little bit like Colombian cumbia but it focuses more on something out of the conga line dance with kicks on every 4th beat.

If someone travelled back to 1976 and played music from 2016 on the radio, would people like it? Generally, what would they think?

I dont think much of it would fly. In 1976 music fit neatly into one of a few nice little boxes and if you didn't listen to one of them you were weird and something was wrong with you. Music from the 50's was(uhg) still played on the radio and still had some influence. You had your choice of 3–4 bands in 3–4 genres and anything else was hard to come by, find, or buy. In the 80's music went through some big changes that for the most part weren't well received. You should have seen/heard how many people thought Madonna was a cheap harlot flown in from another planet. Men at Work's first album release was delayed for a year or two because it was feared people would think it was too weird, pretty tame by today's standards. Although the B-52's had a loyal cult following, most people would have looked at you as if you had brain damage if they caught you listening to it, and even though I love them, they're almost boring today. I know it's not mainstream, but if you were heard listening to Little Big, it could land you in jail. People were surprisingly narrow minded about music then, and both people's tastes and music have come a long way since. Bands like Sugar Ray or Matchbox 20 may have done alright, but even though they're not too out there Sleigh Bells would have been held in disdain. Gucci Mane would have been arrested.

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