Featured In
ALBUMMe Cansé De Rogarle - SingleLola Beltrán
Albums by Lola Beltrán
ALBUMLa Última CanciónLola Beltrán
ALBUMBajo Las EstrellasLola Beltrán
ALBUMCuando El DestinoLola Beltrán
ALBUMMi Música MexicanaLola Beltrán
ALBUMAmor EternoLola Beltrán
ALBUMPaloma NegraLola Beltrán
ALBUMCon Sus Canciones Rancheras FavoritasLola Beltrán
ALBUMLa CigarraLola Beltrán
ALBUMCanta 16 Éxitos de José Alfredo JiménezLola Beltrán
ALBUMHay OjitosLola Beltrán
Lola Beltrán's Popular Music Videos
Qué Bonito Amor (feat. Antonio Aguilar)
Lola Beltrán
Cucurrucucú Paloma
Lola Beltrán
Paloma Negra
Lola Beltrán
Huapango Torero (feat. Pedro Vargas & Rafael Bertrand)
Lola Beltrán
La Cigarra
Lola Beltrán
Cucurrucucú Paloma
Lola Beltrán
Sufriendo a Solas (En Vivo en Bellas Artes, México)
Lola Beltrán
La Milpa (En Vivo Con La Banda El Recodo)
Lola Beltrán
Cucurrucucú Paloma
Lola Beltrán
Paloma Negra (Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Lola Beltrán
Artist Playlists
Lola Beltrán Essentials
Her unmatched, striking vibrato elevated ranchera music to global art.
Artist Biography
Lola Beltrán was a singer, actress, television presenter, and icon of the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema, best known for her commanding voice and timeless contributions to ranchera music. Born María Lucila Beltrán Ruiz in 1932, in El Rosario, Sinaloa, she made her big-screen debut at eight in an Argentine film titled El cantor del circo and performed in small roles throughout her teens before relocating to Mexico City, where she found work as a secretary at popular radio station XEW. In 1954, she was discovered by radio announcer Raul Mendivil and took the stage name Lola Beltrán before launching a screen career spanning decades and dozens of films. She also frequently sang with mariachis, like on the classic “Cucurrucucú Paloma” (featured in the 1965 film of the same name) and “Soy Infeliz,” which became the mournful centerpiece of Pedro Almodóvar's 1988 movie, Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. In 1994, Beltrán celebrated her 40-year career with a historic concert at Mexico City's Palace of Fine Arts, immortalizing her grand legacy before her passing two years later.
Hometown
El Rosario, Sinaloa, Mexico
Genre
Latin