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Pages in category "Fictional Brazilian people in video games" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
[108] Miranda was the first Brazilian artist to gain worldwide fame in the 1950s, and she continued to define South American music in North America for decades. In 1991, Veloso wrote that "today, anything associated with Brazilian music in America – or with any music from the Southern Hemisphere in the Northern – makes us think of Carmen ...
Frontlines (stylized in all caps) is a first-person shooter game that first released to the public as a beta in February 2022, with its full release a year later on February 22, 2023. [46] The game was developed by Maximillian, a team of five people beginning in 2019. [47] In the game, two teams of seven players fight for the highest score in a ...
Images from the start of the first week of the 2024 Olympics. ... One of the standout moments of the Olympic Games so far came from Brazilian surfer Gabriel Medina (pictured above), who was ...
Fictional indigenous Brazilian people (4 P) M. Monica and Friends (1 C, 37 P) S. Brazilian superheroes (3 P) V. Fictional Brazilian people in video games (5 P)
Os Mutantes, influential Brazilian psychedelic rock band linked with the Tropicália movement of the late 1960s; Pitty (1977–), rock singer and composer; Rafael Bittencourt (1971–), Angra guitarist; Raul Seixas (1945–1989), rock singer and composer; Renato Russo (1960–1996), Legião Urbana singer and frontman
Roberto Carlos Braga (Brazilian Portuguese pronunciation: [ʁoˈbɛʁtu ˈkaʁlus]; born 19 April 1941) is a Brazilian singer-songwriter, also known as "King of Latin Music" or simply "the King". [2] Most of his songs were written in partnership with his friend Erasmo Carlos (no relation). Roberto Carlos has sold over 70 million albums around ...
It was released in April 1979, when many music fans were primarily listening to disco. In August 1979 there was a cultural anti-disco backlash that encouraged many to turn from disco to pop music instead. "Sad Eyes" is notable as the song that ended the six-week reign of the biggest smash hit of the year, The Knack's "My Sharona". This song ...