Monday, March 12, 2012

OJOS ESPAÑOLES - Hugo Avendaño

This morning someone over on YouTube posted a "Spanish Eyes."   I thought about Hugo Avendaño's version at once. 

Placido Domingo is way out  in front of nearly every one else with this song but in my mind there is one who stands head and shoulders above all the crowd -  Hugo Avendaño.

Hugo Avendaño Espinoza was born in Tuxpan, Veracruz, Mexico on 8 March 1927.  He died 5 January 1998 from pancreatic cancer.  In his youth he began medical studies but left that to learn  voice under Joseph Pierson who also was instructor to such greats as Jorge Negrete, Pedro Vargas, and Esquivel.   Leonard Warren was his teacher at the Metropolitan Opera in New York.

Hugo Avendaño sang in many Verde operas across the Americas and enjoyed a popular career singing romantic Mexican songs.  He was married many years with the soprano Graziella Garza.  They had three children together.  This list of  Avendaño's lifetime achievements is long indeed.

Today we respectfully submit his version of OJOS ESPAÑOLES as perhaps the best ever sung.

Las Letras:
Son como el mar,
como el azul del cielo,
como el sol;
Son del color
de un clavel que empieza a despertar.

Son algo más
que las estrellas al anochecer,
¡Olé y olé!
Los ojos de la española
que yo amé

Yo fuí feliz,
mirando aquellos ojos
de mi amor;
Yo nunca ví
ni en el arco iris su color

Son algo más
que las estrellas al anochecer,
¡Olé y olé!
Los ojos de la española
que yo amé
ojos de amor, que nunca olvidaré


on english this is approximately:
They are like the sea,
as the blue sky,
like the sun;
Are the color
of a carnation that starts to awaken.

Are more
the stars at night,
Ole and Ole!
The eyes of the Spanish
I loved

I was happy,
looking at those eyes
of my love;
I never saw
rainbow or color

Are more
the stars at night,
Ole and Ole!
The eyes of the Spanish
I loved
eyes of love, I will never forget



Ojos Espanoles was written by Berthold Kämpfert (16 October 1923 – 21 June 1980) from Hamburg, Germany. Known in most of the world as "Spanish Eyes" the song has  been sung and heard almost everywhere.

and now the song:

Kotasierota has a particularly beautiful instrumental version of this song for which she has graciously offered Avendaño's version to be a response.


Richard Abel - Spanish Eyes




do sljedeći put, blagoslov - until next time, blessings,

Canovals a.k.a. Slavonac
12 Ožujak 2012








An open letter to Big Brother ...

Yesterday I heard how the Homeland Security People in the United States are monitoring all our "Social Networks," probably including our blogs.  This is intrusive and insulting and possibly damaging.   We all have heard about how even highly placed officials have been refused boarding passes on airplanes because somehow they made it onto some list or another the government keeps.  What I don't hear about is how the government replaces the cost of the airplane ticket when a person is refused boarding because of one of their mistakes. 

I'm fairly sure this blog has a pretty fair following in the United States government because I routinely talk about Mexico, the borderland area between Mexico and the United States, and Eastern Europe.  I appreciate this following.  It is nice that someone reads my blog.  Thank you Big Brother.  If I can get you to read it enough perhaps I can eventually make some money from Adsense or some such.   

Actually, I am hoping that Google monitors this blog as much as the government does.  This morning while I am signed in everywhere to Canovals, the Google Blog here insisted on signing me into Canovals2 which of course does not exist on their Blog system.  Clever, huh?   Google / YouTube also tries to sign in another account which uses Yahoo as my Yahoo Google account - only Google cannot find that account as a Google account so they try their hardest to get me to sign up for an account which I don't want.  And ... if I already have it, why can't they find it.  Clever, huh? 

This morning, Google has my blog in Croatian even though I've chosen English as the language we will use here and I've written quite a bit about that  just that to explain why.  Really clever folks these Google guys are, yes?

Big Brother, you would do me a big favor if you could pass this entry along to the really clever fellows over at Google so they  could think over their cleverness.  

do sljedeći put, blagoslov - until next time, blessings,

Canovals a.k.a. Slavonac
12 Ožujak 2012