Terry Francis | ar

Mike Francis, alias Francesco Puccioni (26.04.1961-30.01.2009), was born at 01:20 on April 26, 1961 in Florence, Italy. The choice of an English stage name comes from Mike's direct contact with American culture. Right after High School, although he thought of going to university, he began writing seriously his first songs, while at the same time studying composition and arrangement. Since his first album "Let's not talk about it", including the hit "Survivor", Mike carried through his activity as an author and composer with great success, other than for himself as in "Let Me In", for other artists, in this particular...
Todd Terry is one of the most legendary house producers of all time, creating a distinctive Todd Terry sound that is instantly recognizable on any dancefloor. From the late '80s, Todd Terry has been producing and performing music, mainly in the more club-oriented style of house music. Classics like Weekend and House Is A Feelin' are known by most lovers of house music and still played by many a DJ worldwide. Terry's productions can be described as a varied collection of samples blending the sounds of classic disco, the more introspective Chicago sound pioneered earlier in the decade, plus plenty...
There seems to be at least four artists sharing this moniker. 01. The mysterious acid folk mastermind behind the album "Rojvi", who has also released albums under the names Jim Collins, Tommy Roundtree, Arian Sample and C.C./Boots/ Snake & Remus. 02. A singer on Nico Nico Douga. Mylist: http://www.nicovideo.jp/mylist/11341776 03. Terry is a Indonesian female singer. Terryana Fatiah (born in Jakarta on June 14, 1984 is an Indonesian singer mixed Dutch, Arabic and Padang) was started in the country music scene from August 2004 through a single called "Hatiku Beku", a song rendition of Koes Plus, included in the compilation...
Francis Bebey (1929–2001) was a Cameroonian artist, musician, and writer. Bebey was born in 1929 in Douala, Cameroon. He attended the Sorbonne and Paris, France, and received further education in the United States. In 1957, Bebey moved to Ghana at the invitation of Kwame Nkrumah to all Africans from non-independent territories. Bebey took a job as a broadcaster. In the early 1960s, Bebey moved to France and started work in the arts, establishing himself as a musician, sculptor, and writer. His most popular novel was Agatha Moudio's Son. His writing and music often cross-fertilised, and he performed a song by...