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- Q11297109 subject Q7214503.
- Q11297109 subject Q8955580.
- Q11297109 abstract "La Llorona is a song.It is difficult to pinpoint exactly who was the first to compose the song "La Llorona", since it stems from the hundred-year-old legend. However, the song was first made well-known to contemporary audiences in 1993 by the Costa Rican-born singer Chavela Vargas. The song's name and inspiration comes from the legend of La Llorona popular in North and South America. The story is of a woman said to haunt the valleys of Mexico, weeping for her children whom she drowned in a fit of madness. There are many versions to the story, but all are a variation of certain details. In one version, a woman drowns her kids because the man she had been seeing wanted to break things off with her. He did not want someone who already had a family. After he finds out about that she killed her children, however, the man leaves her indefinitely and she then commits suicide.".
- Q11297109 wikiPageExternalLink wise_latina.
- Q11297109 wikiPageExternalLink 3.
- Q11297109 wikiPageExternalLink la-me-chavela-vargas-20120806.
- Q11297109 wikiPageExternalLink portraits-of-lila-downs-singing-la-llorona-at-oaxaca-concert-night-photography.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q10737.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q125106.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q171128.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q1866923.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q236024.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q23880.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q240490.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q35738.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q36192.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q5120761.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q7214503.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q727634.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q8955580.
- Q11297109 wikiPageWikiLink Q96.
- Q11297109 comment "La Llorona is a song.It is difficult to pinpoint exactly who was the first to compose the song "La Llorona", since it stems from the hundred-year-old legend. However, the song was first made well-known to contemporary audiences in 1993 by the Costa Rican-born singer Chavela Vargas. The song's name and inspiration comes from the legend of La Llorona popular in North and South America.".
- Q11297109 label "La Llorona (song)".