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Todo Ha Cambiado (formerly known as "Quiéreme") is a formerly unidentified bolero cover of Los Aragón's song of the same name by late Mexican singer Erick (AKA El Caballero de la Canción), released in 1997 on the album Emociones.

Search History

The song was posted to YouTube on May 1st, 2022, by user Alex Musica del Ayer, giving it the placeholder name "Quiéreme". It was recorded onto a cassette tape in 2017 in Mexico, possibly off of a radio station.

On May 13th, 2022, in response to a comment by user Jorge Garcia B asking Alex to post the full tape, he said he lost the original tape after he digitized it. The cassettes were a Walkman WM FX 290 that had since broke and an Olympus WS-210 voice recorder, which were released in 2004 and 2007 respectively.

Over time, the song was reuploaded to YouTube by several users, such as Lost Media And Unknown Songs, UZ, Mamoy9a, Anon0122, Chris Network, Q, Ofrix, Zumi, LautrecPH, and multiple others, amassing over 15k views.

On June 20th, 2024, on one of the videos of the song on YouTube, WatZatSong user julombie discovered that the song was a cover of Los Aragón's song Todo Ha Cambiado[1][2]. The description below the clip indicates the copyright of Musart-Balboa, a division of Concord music group, Inc. and the year of release of the song is 1973.

On July 2nd, 2024, Reddit user Affectionate-Line152 found the composers mentioned by Julombie (Jorge Ortega, Roberto López Gali) by searching for the song on Shazam. He didn't find anything significant about Jorge Ortega. However, it was a bit easier to find information about Roberto López Gali as his life is well documented.

Affectionate-Line152 also discovered a listing for the song in the Society of Authors and Composers of Mexico, which listed a cover version by a singer named Erick[3]. He also discovered an Amazon listing for a CD by Erick titled Emociones,[4] which Discogs lists as being released in 1997.[5]

On August 1st, 2024, the song was fully identified as Todo Ha Cambiado by Erick after Discord user TSG purchased Erick's album Emociones and uploaded the full high-quality audio to Discord.[6]

Debunked leads

  • Argentinian singer Elio Roca. Deceased, someone reached out to their relatives. They acknowledged that it sounded like him, but they didn't recognise the song.

Lyrics

(Verse 1)
Con fervor, le ruego siempre a mi destino
Que tu amor, conmigo vaya en mi camin
No podré vivir un día sin tus besos
Necesito de ti, de tus abrazos
Para qué negar la dicha que ahora siento
Qué he de hacer si soy feliz cada momento
Encontré felicidad y fé
Deseos de querer
 
(Chorus)
 Por eso quiero que lo sepas de una vez
Todo ha cambiado desde que te conocí
Tarde o temprano llegarás a comprender
Que yo no sé mentir
 
(Verse 2)
Quiéreme, cuando te diga que te quiero
Créeme, que te idolatro y te venero
Solo a ti consagraré mi vida enter
Nuestras almas así unidas estarán
 
(Chorus)
Por eso quiero que lo sepas de una vez
Todo ha cambiado desde que te conocí
Tarde o temprano llegarás a comprender
Que yo no sé mentir
 
(Verse 2)
Quiéreme, cuando te diga que te quiero
Créeme, que te idolatro y te venero
Solo a ti consagraré mi vida entera
Nuestras almas así unidas estarán

Erick

Erick; El Caballero de la Canción was a ballad singer from Mexico.

In 1970, he released his first single, Viaje Al Sol / Gwendolyn, with two songs

  • Viaje Al Sol
  • Gwendolyn

In 1970, he released his first EP, Antigua, with four songs.

  • Antigua
  • Hasta Luego
  • Alla Donde Vive Dios
  • La Primera Novia

In 1971, he released his second and final EP, Hoy Daría Yo La Vida, with four songs.

  • Hoy Daría Yo La Vida
  • Amar Y Vivir
  • Mi Propio Yo
  • En Libertad

In 1972, he released his second single, Gracias Mi Amor Por Todo Lo Vivido, with two songs.

  • Gracias Mi Amor Por Todo Lo Vivido
  • Decente

In 1972, he released his third and final EP, Por, with two songs.

  • Por
  • Y Sigo Buscanando

In 1976, his song Francisco was featured on the compilation EP Vergel.

In 1978, he released his first album, Quiero Huir De Mi.

In 1981, he released his second album, Noches De Gabribaldi.

In 1997, he released his third and final album, Emociones, which included this song.

Apparently, sometime after 1997, Erick unfortunately passed away.

Gallery

External Links

References