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Miami Sound Machine's follow-up album Primitive Love was released in 1985. While the horn section were featured on prominent cuts, guitarist Wesley B. Wright was the only member of the core rhythm section to actually record on the LP. [20] On all of the previous LPs, the band members almost exclusively recorded the original studio tracks.
The Mavericks are an American band from Miami, Florida. The band consists of Raul Malo (lead vocals, guitar), Paul Deakin (drums), Eddie Perez (lead guitar), and Jerry Dale McFadden (keyboards). Malo and Deakin founded the band in 1989 along with Robert Reynolds (bass guitar) and Ben Peeler (lead guitar).
The band was established in Dublin in 1962 by impresario Tom Doherty. He recruited an existing group, the Downbeats Quartet, comprising Joe Tyrell (piano), Tony Bogan (drums), Clem Quinn (guitar), and Martin Phelan (saxophone), and augmented them with singer Jimmy Harte who at the time was a member of The Ambassadors Showband in Dublin, joined trumpeter Tommy O'Rourke, trombonist and vocalist ...
The single "Throw The D", released in January 1986, was a permanent blueprint for future Miami bass songs. [4] Wong Won said that the song came about when they noticed a new popular dance in Miami called "Throwing The Dick" when the Herman Kelly and Life's song "Dance to the Drummer's Beat" played. The dance consisted of men throwing their hips ...
Members of the American Latin music band Miami Sound Machine. Pages in category "Miami Sound Machine members" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
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Exposé was formed in 1984 by Miami disc jockey and producer Lewis Martineé. Working with his partners Ismael Garcia and Frank Diaz at Pantera Productions, talent scouts hired Sandra "Sandeé" Casañas , Alejandra "Alé" Lorenzo, and Laurie Miller as the group's original lineup, under the name X-Posed, which later became Exposé.
In September 2009, band membership reached 179, due in part to bringing in members of the Florida International University's marching band, which was dissolved that year due to budget cuts, though FIU's band would again return in 2010. [5] The band also includes students from Miami Dade College and other schools. [6]