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Vicente Fernández, the debonair Mexican crooner with the buttery baritone whose romantic rancheras and timeless folk anthems defined the grit and romance of his turbulent homeland and elevated him to a cultural giant for generations of fans throughout Latin America and beyond, died Sunday. He was 81.
The last of Mexico’s crooning matinee idols, the self-taught troubadour recorded more than 50 albums, all in Spanish, and sold tens of millions of copies.
El ídolo de la potente voz, el traje de charro impecable, el bigote pronunciado y la sonrisa amable, ha muerto.
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