Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Los Moonlights kept playing live as long as possible. In 1976, they released their second album, Moonlight Hoy. However, the album was a commercial failure and the band dissolved in 1977. In 2015, Los Moonlights reunited and launched a national tour to promote their new album, titled Otro día en la ciudad. [2] [3]
They are signed to Jazz label Concord Music Group. [1] Karlos "Solrak" Paez, the man behind the B-Side Players, grew up in a musical family. His father Ezequiel Paez is a trombone player and musical arranger who spent 17 years in Los Moonlights from Tijuana and 10 years in La Banda Del Recodo. [2]
Los Moonlights released a song entitled "Milonga de pelo largo" (Milonga of long hair) on their debut LP, Moonlights. In Rio Grande do Sul, milonga is an important regional genre and it is part of the repertoire of many gaucho musical groups and interpreters, not to be confused with the Argentinean gauchos. It also continues to influence other ...
His music recording career started in 2005, with the album, Unmerited, that was released on May 24, 2005, by Taseis Music. [6] He released the subsequent two albums, Oh What a God , on May 25, 2011, and, It's Not Over , on August 2, 2011. [ 6 ]
The score is an alteration of minimal instrumentation and sounds from full chamber orchestra. [5] [6] His initial musical instincts were to have "sensitivity, tenderness and intimacy", and adding a counterpoint is the idea of chopped and screwed music, a type of Southern hip hop genre where songs are bent and pitched and slowed down and become "fascinating morphed versions of themselves that ...
The city's dirtiest cop was also the most colorless, with a forgettable face and a personality as vague as fog. At 77, he has been in lockup for 38 years, more than twice as long as he wore a badge.
Gabbriette was born Gabriella Leigh Bechtel [13] on July 28, 1997, in Orange County, California [14] to a Mexican mother and a Swiss-German father. [5] [15] Growing up, she recalled: "The majority of students at my high school were beautiful, strictly white blonde girls, and my sister and I were Hispanic.
The album features songs performed on the show by series leads Cybill Shepherd and Bruce Willis, alongside the series theme song performed by Al Jarreau - which was the later Nile Rodgers-produced version used in Seasons 4 and 5.