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  2. Music of Abruzzo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Abruzzo

    Pescara is the site of the Luisa D'Annunzio music conservatory (named for the mother of author Gabriele D'Annunzio, born in Abruzzo) and also the site of the annual Pescara Jazz Festival, one of the most noteworthy such festivals in Italy. The D'Annuzio Theater, built in 1963, is an important venue, as is the auditorium of the music conservatory.

  3. Abruzzo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abruzzo

    The dialects spoken in the Abruzzo region can be divided into three main groups: Sabine dialect, in the province of L'Aquila, a central Italian dialect; Abruzzo Adriatic dialect, in the province of Teramo, Pescara and Chieti, that is virtually abandoned in the province of Ascoli Piceno, a southern Italian dialect

  4. Italian folk music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_folk_music

    Canzoniere del Lazio is one of the biggest names from central Italy during the 1970s roots revival. With socially aware lyrics, this new wave of Italian roots revivalists often played entirely acoustic songs with influences from jazz and others. More modern musicians in the same field include Lucilla Galeazzi, La Piazza and La Macina.

  5. Lists of songs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_songs

    List of songs written by Holland, Dozier and Holland; List of songs written by Hyuna; List of songs written by Irving Berlin; List of songs written by Isaac Hayes and David Porter; List of songs written by Jack Keller; List of songs written by Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich; List of songs written by Jeffrey Steele

  6. Music of Italy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Italy

    Several folk bagpipes are well-known, including central Italy's zampogna; dialect names for the bagpipe vary throughout Italy-- eghet in Bergamo, piva in Lombardy, müsa in Alessandria, Genoa, Pavia and Piacenza, and so forth. Numerous percussion instruments are a part of Italian folk music, including wood blocks, bells, castanets, drums.

  7. Honorific nicknames in popular music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honorific_nicknames_in...

    When describing popular music artists, honorific nicknames are used, most often in the media or by fans, to indicate the significance of an artist, and are often religious, familial, or most frequently royal and aristocratic titles, used metaphorically.

  8. Alpine folk music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpine_folk_music

    Alpine folk music (German: Alpenländische Volksmusik; German's Volksmusik means "people's music" or as a Germanic connotative translation, "folk's music" [1]) is the common umbrella designation of a number of related styles of traditional folk music in the Alpine regions of Slovenia, Northern Croatia, Germany, Austria, Switzerland and South Tyrol ().

  9. Central Marchigiano dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Marchigiano_dialect

    It is one of the Central Italian dialects and forms part of a continuum that also encompasses Umbrian and Tuscan. There are notable grammatical, lexical and idiomatic differences between Marchigiano and standard Italian, but it is considered, along with the rest of Central Italian dialects, to be fairly intelligible to a speaker of Standard ...