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"Tornerò" (Italian for "I Will Return") is a song by the Italian musical group I Santo California, released in 1974 as their debut single. The following year, the down-tempo love ballad became a number-one hit in Italy as well as a top five hit in German speaking countries.
[3] [4] In 1978, they scored their last top ten hit in Italy with "Manuela, amore!". After that, I Santo California's popularity decreased. After that, I Santo California's popularity decreased. The band continued to record and perform but struggled to maintain the same degree of commercial success.
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Tornero may refer to: "Tornerò" (Mihai Trăistariu song), 2006
Kazuhisa Ueki and Soichiro Tanaka wanted to come up with an entirely new model of keyboards for Yamaha after the success of the PSR-9000 digital workstation series. They gave the new model the name Tyros, which was the first of its kind in the market, that had features not found on the PSR. One common thing that the two makers did was that both ...
Genos series (The successor series to the Tyros and the original PSR-SX series) Genos (31 August 2017) Genos2 (15 November 2023) Oriental Arranger Workstations. PSR-A1000 (2002, Oriental version of Yamaha PSR-1100) PSR-OR700 (2007, Oriental version of Yamaha PSR-S700) PSR-A2000 (2012, Oriental model and black version of Yamaha PSR S710. And the ...
Some high-end models use a neck-through-body design. Some come with Yamaha active pickups, two single coils and one humbucker. Most of these instruments were generally known as RGZ, including the RGZ820R, a custom plaid graphic model with two humbuckers and a Floyd Rose licensed locking tremolo, played by rock guitarist Blues Saraceno.
Player and control unit of Yamaha Disklavier Mark III Sequencer control unit of Yamaha Disklavier Mark III. Later developments of the reproducing piano include the use of magnetic tape and floppy disks, rather than piano rolls, to record and play back the music; and, in the case of one instrument made by Bösendorfer, computer assisted playback.
In 1866, Tornero and his brother Orestes bought the enterprise from their father. [1] Orestes maintained the library and its dependencies, while Recaredo continued administering the printing house and the newspaper. [1] Later, they formed Tornero & Sons Society (Spanish: Sociedad Tornero e Hijos) with his father, who was living in outside Chile ...