| 1. El son del antojo |
| 2. Mi novio Jose |
| 3. Cuando te mueves |
| 4. Como crees? |
| 5. Nada mas que ver |
| 6. Tantas cosas |
| 7. Mi lindo divan |
| 8. Vete a dormir |
| 9. Te despides con un beso |
| 10. No te soporto mas |
| 11. El rey del "rock" |
Editorial Reviews
About the Artist
Diana (D.R.) Ransdell lives in Tucson, Arizona, where she plays with Mariachi América. Her love of music is also reflected in "Amirosian Nights," a novel about a mariachi player who winds up getting a job in a bouzouki band on a Greek island. (Also available from Amazon.) She teaches English composition at the University of Arizona. A native of Illinois, she doesn't plan to leave Arizona anytime soon! As often as possible, she spends the summers traveling. Her favorite destinations include Italy and Greece.
Product Description
Mariachi moxie! Diana's spunky songs are a counterpart to traditional mariachi lyrics which point the finger at women as the culprits of men's woes. Most of the tunes are bright and humorous such as "El son del antojo" (a singer flirts behind her boyfriend's back) and "Mi novio Jose" (the singer invents a boyfriend to dodge a would-be partner). Diana ("La Platanita" ) dips into a serious note with the title track, a huapango about a painful break-up. Lyrics are included in a booklet. The instrumentation is traditional: voices, trumpets, violins, guitar, vihuela, and guitarron.
Diana (D.R.) Ransdell lives in Tucson, Arizona, where she plays with Mariachi América. Her love of music is also reflected in "Amirosian Nights," a novel about a mariachi player who winds up getting a job in a bouzouki band on a Greek island. (Also available from Amazon.) She teaches English composition at the University of Arizona. A native of Illinois, she doesn't plan to leave Arizona anytime soon! As often as possible, she spends the summers traveling. Her favorite destinations include Italy and Greece.
Product Description
Mariachi moxie! Diana's spunky songs are a counterpart to traditional mariachi lyrics which point the finger at women as the culprits of men's woes. Most of the tunes are bright and humorous such as "El son del antojo" (a singer flirts behind her boyfriend's back) and "Mi novio Jose" (the singer invents a boyfriend to dodge a would-be partner). Diana ("La Platanita" ) dips into a serious note with the title track, a huapango about a painful break-up. Lyrics are included in a booklet. The instrumentation is traditional: voices, trumpets, violins, guitar, vihuela, and guitarron.
Diana canta la venganza: Nada mas que ver,Diane Ransdell,Diane Ransdell,These original, upbeat mariachi tunes gently poke fun at men.
New Age Music:
- Dorotanety
- Drop the Debt
- El Ultimo
- Ethiopia: Ari Polyphonies
- Exotic Oriental Belly Dancing
- Flamenco Master
- Flower of Scotland
- From Seville to Boukhara [Live]
- Haha [CD-single] [Import]
- Here's to the Irish [Box set]
New Age Music
Girl Talk [CD-single] [Import]
In Morte Di Madonna Laura (Madrigal Cycle after Texts of Petrarca)
Music: 40 Anos De Estrada [Box set] [Import]
Kottonmouth-Urban Legend [Explicit Lyrics]
L' Album Di Colonne Sonore Piu Bello del Mondo [Import]
Night and Day (1946 Film) [Soundtrack] [Import]
Mourn You Till I Join You [CD-single]