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Alegría Family
Alegria (Portuguese, Catalan) or Alegría (Spanish) or Allegria (Italian), means joy in English. It also may refer to: Places *Alegria, Cebu, a municipality in the Philippines * Alegria, Rio Grande do Sul, a city in Brazil * Alegria, Surigao del Norte, a municipality in the Philippines *Alegría, El Salvador, a municipality in El Salvador *Alegría-Dulantzi, a municipality in the province of Álava, northern Spain Film and shows * ''Alegría'' (Cirque du Soleil), a Cirque du Soleil touring show * ''Alegría'' (1999 film), a film adaptation of the Cirque du Soleil show * ''Alegría'' (2021 film), a Spanish film directed by Violeta Salama * :it:Allegria!, Italian quiz show 1999-2001 hosted by Mike Bongiorno Music * ''Alegrías'', one of the many ''palos'' or subgenres of flamenco music Albums * ''Alegría'' (Marcos Witt album), 2006 * ''Alegría'' (Wayne Shorter album), 2003 *''Allegria'', a 1982 album by the Gipsy Kings * ''Allegria'' (1990 album), a 1990 album by the Gipsy K ...
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Alegria, Cebu
Alegria, officially the Municipality of Alegria (; ), is a municipality of the Philippines, municipality in the Philippine Province, province of Cebu, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 25,620 people. It is home of the first onshore oil field in the Philippines, the Alegria oil field, Alegria Oil Field. History Timeline:''Libro de Erecciones de Gobierno'', Philippine National Archives *Pre-1850: Native tribe; then a Spanish-era ''barrio'' called Tuburan after the spring (''tubod'') located at ''sitio'' Tubig (Santa Rosa) in the poblacion. * 31 January 1850: Leaders of Tuburan ask Governor of Cebu to support their petition for civil separation from mother town (''matriz'') Malabuyoc. *4 February: Malabuyoc leaders send letter of support for said petition. Tuburan had a church made of ''tabique de pampango'', a convent and ''tribunal'' of light materials, two rubble watchtowers and 410½ ''tributos'' ( *15 February: Petition goes to the Civil Admin ...
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Allegria
''Allegria'' (Italian; "joy") is the debut studio album by the Gipsy Kings, released in 1982 in Europe. Overview This album and its successor, '' Luna de Fuego'', are very different from their later albums. They are both "unplugged" and traditional, using solely guitars, voices, and hand claps. The album includes two songs never released on a U.S. album ("Pharaon" and "Recuerda") and the original acoustic version of "Djobi Djoba "Djobi, Djoba" is a hit song by the Gipsy Kings, a French-Calé rumba flamenca band. It was initially released in 1982 as an acoustic version on their debut album '' Allegria''. In 1987, the song was re-recorded and released as a single. This vers ...". In 1990, the album was merged with '' Luna de Fuego'', while omitting certain tracks for a re-release to a US audience as '' Allegria (US Version)''. Track listing Credits *Edited By – Yves Desjardins *Photography By – Jacqueline Tarta *Producer – Sara Music *Recorded By – Pierre Braner *Writ ...
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Alegría (Mexican Candy)
Alegría is a Mexican candy made from seeds of amaranth and honey or sugar that is produced mainly in the town of Santiago Tulyehualco in the Xochimilco borough of Mexico City. It has been known as ''alegría'', Spanish for "joy," since the 16th century. The alegría of Tulyehualco was officially declared ''Patrimonio Cultural Intangible de la Ciudad de México'' (an intangible part of the cultural heritage of Mexico City) in September 2016. Amaranth is a plant native to Mexico. In prehispanic times, in addition to forming part of the diet of the indigenous people, it was also used as currency and for ceremonial purposes. Figures of amaranth and honey were made as offerings to the gods. In order to stop those religious practices, Hernán Cortés banned the cultivation of amaranth. The plant began to fall into disuse because those who continued to cultivate it faced being put to death as punishment. Alegrías have become the most popular way of consuming amaranth. These sweets are ...
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L'allegria
("Joy", "Happiness", or better, "Merriness") is a collection of poems published by Giuseppe Ungaretti in 1931. It was an expanded version of a 1919 collection ("Merriness of Shipwrecks"). Many of the poems were written in reaction to Ungaretti's experience as a soldier of World War I. Poems from have been translated by Charles Tomlinson Alfred Charles Tomlinson, CBE (8 January 1927 – 22 August 2015) was an English poet, translator, academic, and illustrator. He was born in Penkhull, and grew up in Basford, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire. Life After attending Longton High S .... References Further reading * Hand, Vivienne, 'Ambiguous Joy: contradictions and tensions in Giuseppe Ungaretti's ''L'allegria''', ''The Italianist'', 16, p. 76-116 * Suvini-Hand, Vivienne, ''Mirage and Camouflage - Hiding behind Hermeticism in Ungaretti's L'Allegria'', Troubadour, 2000 1931 poetry books Italian poetry collections {{poetry-collection-stub ...
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Alegría (surname)
Alegría is a Spanish surname native of the Basque Country, Spain. While some authors place the origin of this lineage in Navarre and Vitoria, most writers take as true that its origin comes from the natives of Alegría de Oria, district of Tolosa, in the province of Guipuzkoa. Branches from the very old houses of the Basque Country and Navarre went to other places in Spain, as some of their knights went to Andalusia to serve the Catholic Monarchs in the conquest of Granada. Others went to Murcia and settled in the town of Totana. The surname then spread to Latin America mostly coming from Navarra. Notable people with the surname include: * Alexander Alegría (born 1992), Spanish footballer * Ciro Alegría (1909–1967), Peruvian journalist, novelist and politician *Claribel Alegría (1924–2018), Nicaraguan writer *Fernando Alegría (1918–2005), Chilean author, diplomat, and academic * Jannet Alegría (born 1987), Mexican taekwondo practitioner * Linda Lizeth Caicedo Alegrí ...
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Mina (Italian Singer)
Mina Anna Mazzini (born 25 March 1940) or Mina Anna Quaini (for the Swiss civil registry), known mononymously as Mina, is an Italian singer and actress. She was a staple of television variety shows and a dominant figure in Italian pop music from the 1960s to the mid-1970s, known for her three-octave vocal range, the agility of her soprano voice, and her image as an Feminism, emancipated woman. In performance, Mina combined several modern styles with traditional Italian melodies and swing music, which made her the most versatile pop singer in Music of Italy, Italian music. With over 150 million records sold worldwide, she is List of estimated best-selling Italian music artists, the best-selling Italian musical artist, as well as one of the List of best-selling music artists, best-selling music artists of all time. Mina dominated the country's charts for 15 years and reached an unsurpassed level of popularity. She has scored Mina discography, 79 albums and 71 singles on the Italia ...
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Alegría (Tiago PZK, Anitta And Emilia Song)
"Alegría" is a song by Argentine singer Tiago PZK, Brazilian singer Anitta, and Argentine singer Emilia. It was released on August 8, 2024, through Warner Music Latina as the fourth single from Tiago's second studio album, '' Gotti A'' (2024). The song was written by the three performers and produced by Tatool and Zecca. Background and release "Alegría" was one of the first songs Tiago worked on for ''Gotti A''. He used Google Translate to write the chorus, which includes lyrics in Portuguese. After recording a demo of the song, he named the file "Anitta", hoping that she could collaborate with him on the track. He also wanted to work with Emilia, who had previously experimented with Brazilian funk in her 2023 song " No Se Ve" in collaboration with Brazilian singer Ludmilla. After showing the demo to Emilia and sending it to Anitta, both artists decided to join the project. The song was written by the three performers and produced by Tatool and Zecca. On June 24, 2024, Tia ...
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Alegría (Cirque Du Soleil Song)
"Alegría" is a pop song by Cirque du Soleil (from their show of the same name), which was recorded in 1994 with the voice of Francesca Gagnon. The song is a multi-lingual adaptation (in English, Italian and Spanish) of another Cirque du Soleil song titled "Un pazzo gridar", written by René Dupéré and Franco Dragone and featuring Italian-only lyrics. "Un pazzo gridar" is also a song from the show Alegría. In 1999, Cirque du Soleil recorded a new version of the song for their film "Alegría, the Film". This new version was also included in the soundtrack of the movie, and received a Genie Award nomination for Best Original Song at the 20th Genie Awards. In 2006, Cirque du Soleil recorded a new multi-lingual adaptation (in English, Portuguese and Spanish) titled "La nova alegría" for their arena show Delirium. This new adaptation was written by René Dupéré, Robert Dillon, Franco Dragone, Paolo Ramos and Manuel Tadros. In April 2019, Cirque du Soleil premiered a new ver ...
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Alegria, Alegria
''Alegria, Alegria'' (Joy, Joy or Happiness, Happiness) is a song written and performed by Caetano Veloso. Often referred to as "the Brazilian anthem of 1967", it later appeared on his influential eponymous 1968 album. At first booed at the 1967 Rede Record festival for its use of electric guitars, Caetano's interpretation and attitude eventually won the audience over. It placed fourth at the festival. Caetano has called it his "best-known song", comparing it to the Rolling Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" in terms of its place in his oeuvre.Pareles, John (September 9, 1992)"At lunch with Caetano Veloso" ''The New York Times''. He partially based the song's composition on the previous year's winner, Chico Buarque's much more conventional "A Banda", purposely incorporating controversial rock and roll instrumentation – provided by the Paulino band The Beat Boys – to provoke the crowd. Although "alegria" means "joy" or "happiness" in Portuguese, the theme of the song i ...
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Allegria (1990 Album)
''Allegria'' is a compilation album by the Gipsy Kings, released in 1990 for US audience. It is a merged album of the original Allegria album from 1982 and Luna de Fuego ''Luna de Fuego'' is the second studio album by the Gipsy Kings, released in 1983 in Europe. Background Just like ''Allegria'', ''Luna de Fuego'' is denoted to be more traditional than their next albums with only acoustic guitars, voices, and ha ... from 1983. The decision was also made to delete four tracks from the two European recordings, possibly to make the double recording fit onto one CD. The four songs which didn't make the cut were "Djobi Djoba", "Pharaon", "Recuerda", and "Gipsyrock". Unlike the Gipsy Kings' other U.S. releases, Allegria has the same acoustic style as their first European albums. Track listing External linksAllegria at gipsykings.net {{Authority control Gipsy Kings albums 1990 live albums ...
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Alegría (Wayne Shorter Album)
''Alegría'' is a studio album by saxophonist Wayne Shorter, released on Verve Records in 2003. It is the second album to feature the 'Footprints Quartet' of Shorter, pianist Danilo Pérez, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Brian Blade. The piece "Orbits" is a complete and quasi-orchestral re-imagining of the song of the same name, originally recorded by the Second Miles Davis Quintet and released on the album ''Miles Smiles'' in 1967. "Capricorn 2" revisits another Shorter composition first recorded by Davis in 1967 (though not released until 1976 on the primarily Shorter-composed '' Water Babies''), while "Angola" dates from Shorter's own 1965 album, '' The Soothsayer''. Reception The AllMusic review by Richard S. Ginell stated that "this disc seemed to confirm a long-awaited creative Indian summer for Wayne Shorter."Ginell, RAllMusic Reviewaccessed September 17, 2011 Similarly, contemporaneous reviews by Ben Ratliff of ''The New York Times'' and ''CMJ New Music Reports Tad ...
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