When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: lambada dance music

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lambada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambada

    After 1994 the Brazilian music style (also called Lambada), which gave birth to the dance, started to fade away, and the dancers began to use other musical sources to continue practicing the Lambada dance. Among these rhythms were the Flamenco Rumba (such as from the Gipsy Kings) and some Arabian music. Some very resistant dancers started to ...

  3. Lambada (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambada_(song)

    It was also covered, around that time, by other Brazilian singers, such as Fafá de Belém, whose 1985 album Aprendizes da Esperança was an early example of the lambada music genre. In the same year, a cover by Regina appeared on the album Lambada Tropical (credited to Chico Mendés) and on the compilation albums Max Mix 9 [101] and Hits '89 ...

  4. Worldbeat (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worldbeat_(album)

    [3] According to a review in Pan-European magazine Music and Media, the album "is of course made up of Latin tinged, summery dance songs with uplifting melodies". [4] Music Week presented the album as "a collection of variations on the Lambada theme which never strays far from maximum accessibility. Pleasant and commercial, if not the real thing".

  5. Brazilian Zouk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilian_Zouk

    Brazilian Zouk is a partner dance which began in Brazil during the early 1990s. Brazilian Zouk evolved from the partner dance known as the Lambada.Over time, Zouk dancers have experimented and incorporated other styles of music into such as R'n'B, pop, hip hop and contemporary.

  6. Chico & Roberta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chico_&_Roberta

    Chico & Roberta was a music and dance duo founded in 1989 consisting of two Brazilian children, Washington "Chico" Oliveira, [1] also known as Uoston and Voston, and Roberta de Brito. [2] The duo's first appearance was in the 1989 video clip of "Lambada". In 1990 they released the album Frente a Frente (Face to Face in Portuguese.)

  7. Lambadão cuiabano - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambadão_cuiabano

    According to Brazilian music researcher Dewis Caldas, it is a synthesis of lambada from Pará with the heritage of rasqueado. The genre had its first "boom" in the 90s, [ 2 ] when rasqueado bands began to dedicate themselves to it almost exclusively and created a busy market for concerts in the peripheral neighborhoods. [ 1 ]

  8. Dançando Lambada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dançando_Lambada

    David Giles, reviewer of Music Week, presented "Dançando Lambada" as a "Parisian re-working of a Brazilian tune that should do well at club level", while wondering whether the sound's novelty can be maintained after "Lambada". [1] To Lisa Tilston of Record Mirror, "this is as funky and Latinate and thoroughly good fun as "Lambada"". [2]

  9. Kaoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaoma

    Kaoma was a French-Brazilian band formed around 1989 by French producers Jean Georgakarakos and Olivier Lorsac to promote the song "Lambada". Loalwa Braz was hired to sing lead vocals, other musicians were Chyco Dru (bass), Jacky Arconte (guitar), Jean-Claude Bonaventure (keyboard), Michel Abihssira (drums and percussion) and Fania (backing vocals).