Intro D D/F# G A Asus4 D D/F# Solo tu y solo yo G A Asus4 solo la noche y al mar D D/F# G A Asus4 Juntos los dos D D/F# Hablando de tonterias G A Asus4 Que nos hacen tan felices D D/F# G A Asus4 Solo nosotros dos Bm7 F#m Tu eres la luna G A Y yo soy el sol Bm7 F#m Tu eres mi vida G A Y yo tu corazon... Coro C D Bm7 Hemos aprendido que la vida Em no es facil C D Pero es mejor vivirla Em entre dos C D Y no pasa un dia en que Bm7 no diga... C D Te quiero... C D Te quiero... G Bm7 C D Mas que ayer G Bm7 C D Mas que ayer D D/F#m Me has enseñado a vivir G A Asus4 Yo te eh enseñado a soñar D D/F#m Hemos crecido en la vida G A Asus4 Hablando siempre con la verdad Bm7 F#m Yo creo en ti G A Y tu en mi Bm7 F#m Puedo sentirte cerca de mi G A Puedo sentirte vivir D D/F# G A Asus4 Conmigo C D Bm7 Hemos aprendido que la vida Em no es facil C D Pero es mejor vivirla Em entre dos C D Y no pasa un dia en que Bm7 no diga... C D Te quiero... C D Te quiero... G Bm7 C D Mas que ayer G Bm7 C D Mas que ayer G Mucho mas que ayer
About the artist behind Te Quiero:
The term "Contemporary Christian Music" originated in the late 1960s in reference to the emerging pop and rock "Jesus music", the musical product of the Jesus Movement of the time.[3] The Mind Garage is considered the first Christian Rock band, with documentation going back to 1967 in local media and national magazines and newspapers such as The Village Voice, Billboard and Rolling Stone magazine. The Electric Liturgy (RCA Victor LSP-4319), recorded 1969 and released 1970, was the first Christian Rock album recorded in Nashville in RCA's "Nashville Sound" Studio A, on Music Row which was under the management of Chet Atken. Studio A is now a museum.
There is also a great deal of popular music which lyrically identifies with Christianity but is not normally considered Contemporary Christian Music.[3] For example, many punk, hardcore, and holy hip-hop groups deal explicitly with issues of faith but are not a part of the Nashville industry[citation needed] (e.g., Seattle-based Tooth and Nail Records). Also, several mainstream music artists sometimes deal with Christian themes in their work, such as Creed, Lifehouse, and Switchfoot, but fall outside of the CCM genre though they may receive airplay on CCM radio stations.[3]
Indexed at Wikipedia.