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Trompeta Toccata is a 1964 album by jazz trumpeter Kenny Dorham. It was released by Blue Note Records in 1965 as BST 84181. It was remastered by original recording engineer Rudy Van Gelder in 2006. Trompeta Toccata, as with Dorham's previous album Una Mas, features only four pieces, three of which were written by the trumpeter himself.
"Trompeta" is a song by French DJ, record producer and singer Willy William. It was released through Scorpio Music on 18 February 2022 as a single. The song samples the 1989 song " Infinity " by British DJ and producer Guru Josh .
A troubadour (English: / ˈ t r uː b ə d ʊər,-d ɔːr /, French: ⓘ; Occitan: trobador [tɾuβaˈðu] ⓘ) was a composer and performer of Old Occitan lyric poetry during the High Middle Ages (1100–1350).
Benny Golson at the Smoke Jazz Club in 2006.. According to his autobiography, Golson wrote Stablemates while on the road with Earl Bostic in Wilmington, Delaware.His soon-to-be ex-wife was present with her friends, and he told her during intermission that he was busy with a "very important assignment" due the following morning.
Johann Nepomuk Hummel completed his Concerto a Trombe Principale (Trumpet Concerto in E Major) in December 1803.It was performed on New Year's Day 1804 to mark Hummel's entrance into the court orchestra of Nikolaus II, Prince Esterházy as Haydn's successor.
Symphonia de Cantiga from the Cantigas de Santa Maria A song of Martim Codax from the Pergaminho Vindel. In the Middle Ages, the Galician-Portuguese lyric, also known as trovadorismo in Portugal and trobadorismo in Galicia, was a lyric poetic school or movement.
Stablemates is an album by American trumpeter Blue Mitchell recorded in 1977 and originally released on the Japanese label Discomate before being released on CD on the Candid label in 2006. [1] The album's name comes from its first track, a tune written by Benny Golson that first appeared on Miles: The New Miles Davis Quintet .
La múcura está en el suelo, mamá, no puedo con ella. Me la arrebató una estrella.. It was composed by Cresencio Salcedo a flute player who also composed Mi cafetal, [2] and has received many recorded versions. In 1948 by Los Trovadores de Barú for Fuentes, then in 1950 entering Mexican cinema in versions by Ninón Sevilla and Pérez Prado.