Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
En Vivo! (Spanish for "live") is a live album and video by English heavy metal band Iron Maiden.Filmed by Banger Films during The Final Frontier World Tour at Estadio Nacional, Santiago, Chile on 10 April 2011 and directed by Andy Matthews, it was released worldwide on 26 March 2012, [1] 23 March in Australia, [2] 27 March in the United States and Canada [3] and 28 March in Japan.
The fall of the Berlin Wall the following year and German reunification in 1990 meant that RIAS-TV was to be closed down. On 1 April 1992, Deutsche Welle inherited the RIAS-TV broadcast facilities, using them to start a German- and English-language television channel broadcast via satellite , DW-TV , adding a short Spanish broadcast segment in ...
Deutsch, Warum Nicht? (literally: German, Why Not?) is a personal course for learning the German language, created by Deutsche Welle and the Goethe-Institut. [15] In 2003, the German government passed a new "Deutsche Welle Act", which defined DW as a tri-media organization, making the Deutsche Welle website an equal partner with DW-TV and DW ...
En Vivo (programadora), a Colombian programadora that operated between 1995 and 2001; Music. En Vivo (Ana Gabriel album), 1990; En vivo (Ha*Ash album), 2019;
América & en Vivo is a live extended play (EP) by Mexican singer Luis Miguel. It was released on 25 September 1992 by WEA Latina . The EP consists of three live versions of " Inolvidable ", No Sé Tú", and " Contigo en la Distancia " from his performance at the National Auditorium in Mexico during his Romance Tour on June 26, 1992, as well as ...
Ha*Ash: En Vivo (transl. "Live") is the first live concert DVD and second live album by American Latin pop duo Ha*Ash. [3] It was released through Sony Music Latin and OCESA Seitrack on December 6, 2019 as a digital download. [ 4 ]
The German edition of Wikipedia was the first non-English Wikipedia subdomain, and was originally named deutsche.wikipedia.com. Its creation was announced by Jimmy Wales on 16 March 2001. [ 2 ] One of the earliest snapshots of the home page, dated 21 March 2001 (revision #9), can be seen at the Wayback Machine site. [ 4 ]
On 1 April 1992, Deutsche Welle inherited RIAS-TV's broadcast facilities, using them to start a German and English-language television channel broadcast via satellite, DW (TV), adding a short Spanish broadcast segment the following year. In 1995, it began 24-hour operation (12 hours in German, 10 hours in English, two hours in Spanish).