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All pages with titles containing Mista; Mista Savona, reggae, dancehall and hip-hop producer; Mista Silva, British-Ghanaian musician; Mista Mo, host of the Canadian TV series Buzz "Mista Mista", a song by the Fugees from their 1996 album The Score; Mister (disambiguation)
Mista was an American R&B group in the mid-1990s from Atlanta, Georgia. Under the production of Organized Noize , the group released their self-titled debut album in 1996, which produced the hit single "Blackberry Molasses" (#53 U.S., #13 U.S. R&B).
Miguel Ángel Ferrer Martínez (born 12 November 1978), known as Mista, is a Spanish former professional footballer who played as a striker, currently a manager.. An unsuccessful Real Madrid youth graduate, he would make a name for himself with Valencia, helping the club to win four major titles during his five-year spell and scoring 48 goals in 218 La Liga games over ten seasons, in ...
Mista Silva released his debut EP, Full Vim, in 2012. Its success led to a record single deal with Polydor universal in 2014. [ 2 ] He was the first unsigned UK Afrobeats artist to have his music playlisted by BBC 1Xtra , [ 3 ] with well received tracks "Boom Boom Tah" and "Now Wats Up" .
Jake Dominic Savona, [1] known professionally as Mista Savona, is an Australian reggae, dancehall, and hip-hop producer and keyboardist based in Melbourne. Career
Mista is the only studio album by Atlanta-based R&B youth quartet, Mista, released on July 30, 1996 via East West Records. Produced entirely by super-producers Organized Noize ( TLC 's " Waterfalls "), Mista was fueled by the release of the album's first single " Blackberry Molasses ".
Mista Don't Play 2 Everythangs Money is the eighth studio album by American rapper Project Pat from Memphis, Tennessee. It was released on April 14, 2015 [ 1 ] via Entertainment One Music . It served as a sequel to his sophomore full-length Mista Don't Play: Everythangs Workin , released in 2001.
The Hebrew word mista‘arev (plural mista‘arvim) is a Hebraization of the Arabic musta‘rib, meaning "he who has become Arab", which refers to both the Musta'arabi Jews, Arabic-speaking Jews who lived in the Middle East from the beginning of Arab rule in the 7th century [2] prior to the arrival of Ladino-speaking Sephardic Jews following their expulsion from Spain in 1492, and the Mozarabs ...