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Paffendorf is a German electronic dance music project. The group consists of Ramon Zenker , also producer of Fragma , Gottfried Engels and Nicolas Valli. The project is represented by the Cologne DJ Christian Schmitz, active on Tiger Records.
Africa is the first official single by Lebanese Canadian singer Karl Wolf from his second studio album Bite the Bullet. The album version of the song features rapper / reggae artist Culture . The song is inspired by the worldwide hit " Africa " by Toto and samples music and covers lyrics from the chorus from the original version, providing new ...
"Hello Afrika" is a 1990 song recorded by Sweden-based musician and producer Dr. Alban. It was released as the debut single from his first album with the same name (1990). It features Swedish Eurodance singer Leila K.
"Africa" is a song by American rock band Toto, the tenth and final track on their fourth studio album Toto IV (1982). It was the second single from the album released in Europe in June 1982 and the third in the United States in October 1982 through Columbia Records .
In 1932, Paffendorf created the designs for the garden city Grengel in Cologne-Porz in the "settler style". [7] He did not live to see the realisation of his plans in 1949. In 1958, the Catholic kindergarten in Grengel was built according to his plans. [8] In addition to his work as an architect, Paffendorf was also a painter.
Alexander Paffendorf, 20, was first enrolled in private school back in 2013 after his mom said she witnessed first-hand the alleged ineptitude, according to old social media posts unearthed and ...
"Africa" is a 1982 song recorded by French singer Rose Laurens. It was one of the singles from her first album Déraisonnable and was released in France at the end of 1982. A version with English lyrics, titled " Africa (Voodoo Master) ", was released worldwide in March 1983.
Billings wrote "Africa" some time before 1770 and included it in his first published hymnbook, The New England Psalm Singer. Later he revised it, publishing a new version in his The Singing Master's Assistant (1778). He made additional revisions, publishing it again in Music in Miniature (1779). It is the latter two versions that are performed ...