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Los Brincos (The Jumps) were one of the most successful Spanish rock bands of the 1960s, and were sometimes called the “Spanish Beatles”. [1] The group was formed in 1964. The members were Fernando Arbex (drums), Manuel González (bass), Juan Pardo (guitar) and Antonio ‘Junior’ Morales (guitar). All four sang, and vocal harmonies were ...
Los Brincos: 2 May "Yo soy aquél" Raphael 9 May 16 May 23 May 30 May 6 June "Michelle" The Beatles: 13 June "Ninguno Me Puede Juzgar" (Nessuno Mi Puo Giudicare) Caterina Caselli: 20 June 27 June "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'" Nancy Sinatra: 4 July "Juanita Banana" Luis Aguilé: 11 July 18 July 25 July 1 August 8 August 15 August 22 August ...
Los Brincos: 19 April 26 April "La Luna y el Toro" Mikaela: 3 May "Venecia Sin Tí" (Que C'Est Triste Venise) Charles Aznavour: 10 May "Downtown" Petula Clark: 17 May 24 May 31 May "Poupée De Cire, Poupée De Son" France Gall: 7 June 14 June "Esos Ojitos Negros" Dúo Dinámico: 21 June "Poupée De Cire, Poupée De Son" France Gall 28 June 5 ...
Born Juan Ignacio Pardo Suárez on November 11, 1942, in Spain, [1] Juan Pardo is singer-songwriter. [2] He was a member of the group Los Brincos.He later teamed up Junior, a former Brincos member to form the duo Juan y Junior. [3]
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He also recorded works outside the world of popular music. He composed the original music for the first Spanish Musical "La Maja de Goya", and music for cinema and ballet. In 2000, he reformed Los Brincos for an extremely successful special concert in A Coruña, and also recorded with a reformed Barrabás.
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Spanish rock is the term used for the variety of rock music produced in Spain. Most bands formed in Spain have sung in Spanish, but many others have sung in English, French and Italian, in addition to the other languages spoken in Spain, such as Catalan, Galician, Basque, Aragonese, and Asturian.