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Guillermo Anderson was born in La Ceiba, Atlántida, Honduras, February 26, 1962, to Jorge Guillermo Anderson Sarmiento and Ida Avilés Sevilla.Guillermo Anderson grew up exposed to the mixture of Garifuna, North American, British, and Caribbean cultures characteristic to the Northern coast of Honduras, which later provided the basis for his artistic style. [1]
The reason given is: This can be expanded from articles listed at Category:Spanish musicians. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. ( June 2024 )
This is a list of notable Spanish artists born after 1800. For artists born before this year, see List of Spanish artists (born 1300–1500) and List of Spanish artists (born 1500–1800) This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
Pedro Luis Domínguez Quevedo was born in Madrid. [1] At age one, he moved to Brazil [2] and returned to Spain at age five, settling in Las Palmas, the Canary Islands. [3] [4] He then spent a year at Columbia University after which he made his Billboard Top 200 debuting song "Columbia".
Alexis Puentes (born 1974), [1] better known by his stage name Alex Cuba, is a Cuban-Canadian singer-songwriter who sings in Spanish and English. He has won two Juno Awards for World Music Album of the Year: in 2006 for Humo de Tabaco, and in 2008 for his second album, Agua del Pozo. In 2010 he won the Latin Grammy for Best New Artist.
Juan Raoul Davis "Johnny" Rodriguez (born December 10, 1951) [1] is an American country music singer. He is a Tejano and Texas country music singer, infusing his music with Latin sounds, and even singing verses of songs in Spanish.
Sandro was born in Buenos Aires to Irma Nydia Ocampo and Vicente Sánchez in 1945. He was raised in the southern suburb of Valentín Alsina, [3] and learned to play the guitar as a child, identifying his music as Romani. [4] His paternal grandfather was a Russian Rom from Hungary – Roma are known in Argentina as Gitanos . [3] [5] [6]
– Named after the J.D. Salinger book of short stories of that name; Loeb, an English major, wanted a literary moniker. [229] Nirvana – Before settling on a permanent name, the band had played under many different names including 'Throat Oyster' and 'Ted, Ed, Fred'. In Buddhism, nirvana means release from the cycle of rebirth and suffering.