It's not "profidia", it's PERFIDIA. Given that, you might be able to find it in a Spanish dictionary.
It not, the answer is that is means "unfaithfulness". It's related to the $64 English word "perfidious".
FWIW, the vocalists on that recording were Dorothy Claire and the Modernaires.
Elmer's Tune - Glenn Miller
Alberto Domínguez (1911-1975
"Say Si Si"
The number one song on October 14, 1939 was "Over the Rainbow" by Glenn Miller.
Between maybe 15 US$ and 20 US$. There are still plenty of Glenn Miller 78s available, check well-known auction site. According to John Flower's (semi-official) discography of Glenn Miller's recordings from 1935 to 1942, Miller himself never recorded that tune for Bluebird. The only recordings of the song by a Glenn Miller-related orchestra were done under the direction of Tex Beneke and Larry O'Brien, and these were on LP or CD.
Is perfidia a public domain song? send answer to panstix@yahoo.com
Moonlight Serenade
No. You may be thinking of the song Frenesi, which he did record.
Elmer's Tune - Glenn Miller
"The Woodpecker Song" by Glenn Miller was the number 1 hit song on May 20, 1940.
"Say Si Si"
Alberto Domínguez (1911-1975
No, it was written after his plane disappeared. There are recordings by the current Glenn Miller Orchestra and a non-very-"Millerish" version by Tex Beneke, done in 1965.
The number one song on October 14, 1939 was "Over the Rainbow" by Glenn Miller.
There were no Moody Blues songs influenced by Glenn Miller, although the Moody part of their name was chosen by keyboardist Mike Pinder after his favourite Duke Ellington track Mood Indigo.
Between maybe 15 US$ and 20 US$. There are still plenty of Glenn Miller 78s available, check well-known auction site. According to John Flower's (semi-official) discography of Glenn Miller's recordings from 1935 to 1942, Miller himself never recorded that tune for Bluebird. The only recordings of the song by a Glenn Miller-related orchestra were done under the direction of Tex Beneke and Larry O'Brien, and these were on LP or CD.
He broadcast an arrangement by Bill Finegan that was much slower and very different from the way Duke Ellington performed the tune as his theme song. However Miller never recorded the song commercially.