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Los del Río "Macarena" 1996 Spain 910,000 1 19 Andrea Bocelli & Hélène Ségara "Vivo per lei (je vis pour elle)" 1998 Italy France 874,000 1 20 Mylène Farmer "Désenchantée" 1991 France 900,000 [2] 1 21 Nomads "Yakalelo" 1998 France 846,000 2 22 Khaled "Aïcha" 1996 Algeria 824,000 1 23 Hermes House Band "I Will Survive" 1998 Netherlands ...
Year Artist Origin Song 1990: Snap! Germany "The Power" [4] 1990: C+C Music Factory: United States "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" 1991: 2 Unlimited: The Netherlands "Get Ready for This" [5]
MTV Unplugged: Comfort y Música Para Volar (Spanish for Comfort and music to fly) is a part-live, part-studio album recorded by Argentine rock band Soda Stereo. The first seven tracks were recorded live at MTV Studios in Miami, Florida, for the show MTV Unplugged. The remaining four tracks were Sueño Stereo outtakes recorded in studio.
Their shows at the Palacio de los Deportes in 1986 [7] and 1989 [8] reportedly drew over 30,000 attendees each, marking significant milestones for sonidero-style events. During this period, the collective incorporated Hi-NRG and Euro disco genres into their sets, distinguishing their performances from other acts and building a dedicated fanbase.
Nu-disco is a 21st-century dance music genre associated with the renewed interest in 1970s and early 1980s disco, [132] mid-1980s Italo disco, and the synthesizer-heavy Euro disco aesthetics. [133] The moniker appeared in print as early as 2002, and by mid-2008 was used by record shops such as the online retailers Juno and Beatport. [ 134 ]
In 1985, Soda Stereo visited Los Angeles California for a press tour and was interviewed by Miguel Banojian, a U.S. journalist with a degree from UCLA, who was also the first Hispanic rock concert promoter in Los Angeles, and was scheduling Hispanic music concerts around Hollywood in clubs like Whisky a GoGo and the Rainbow & Paladium Theater ...
This is a list of artists primarily associated with the disco era of the 1970s and some of their most noteworthy disco hits. Numerous artists, not usually considered ...
The term "Euro-disco" was first used during the mid-1970s to describe the non-UK based disco productions and artists such as D.D. Sound, West Germany groups Arabesque, [3] Boney M., [4] Dschinghis Khan and Silver Convention, the Munich-based production trio Giorgio Moroder, Donna Summer and Pete Bellotte, [5] the Italian singer Gino Soccio, [6] French artists Amanda Lear, Dalida, Cerrone, Hot ...
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