
Imagine yourself sitting in front of the Eiffel Tower, at the Paris street cafe, drinking coffee in the most romantic city in the world. Ideal for slow romantic projects, or travel and tourism purposes requiring French style elements. Download MP3 Rural French Dance by Geoff HarveyĪ slow traditional French music track featuring traditional instruments such as Accordion, Dulcimer and French Fiddle. It can be easily used as a background for travel, lifestyle, vacation video, advertising, and more. Great as a joyful and bright background for your special videos. Happy, carefree, playful, and catchy acoustic gypsy French jazz swing music track with acoustic guitar, accordion, bass, and jazz percussion. Suitable for a romantic comedy, long road trip, nostalgic moments, family reunions, and other projects needing a warm nostalgic glow. Featuring acoustic guitars, accordion, brushed drums. Download MP3 French Baguette by Soundrollįast and upbeat French music with elements of swingin' gypsy jazz or Russian or Balkan folk.
U TUBE FRENCH CAFE MUSIC MOVIE
Lovely and romantic background music can be perfect for weddings, travel stories, emotional moments, films, movie trailers, cinematic views, bakery advertising, French-style videos, city views, and many more. This one is an amazing and wonderful acoustic royalty-free track with piano leading. Download MP3 In Love With Paris by DPmusic Great choice for cafe and restaurant videos, projects related to Paris and France, cooking videos, documentaries, commercials and many more media projects. A romantic and sentimental waltz track featuring accordion, bass, drums and violin. " Moliendo Café" at Discogs (list of releases).^ "Perché Dale Cavese viene cantato ovunque".Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. ^ "" Moliendo Café" ("Grinding Coffee")".^ I singoli più venduti del 1962 (Biggest-selling singles of 1962), in Italian.Encyclopedia of Contemporary Latin American and Caribbean Cultures. ^ a b c "Dale Cavese: the football chant that took over the internet and the world".The video went viral and its popularity then spread to other clubs around the world, with many fans adapting the chants for their own teams. The fans first used it in a match against Ancona in September 2006, and a clip of their chant " Dale Cavese" was uploaded to YouTube in 2007. The chant was picked up by fans of the Italian team Cavese 1919 after coming across a CD of Boca Juniors chants. The chant was first adopted by fans of Boca Juniors a few years after Julio Iglesias had recorded the song, and it became popular in La Bombonera for a few decades, where the fans know the chant as " Dale Boca" ("Come on Boca"). " Moliendo Café" has become a popular chant for soccer fans around the world, and the chant is widely known as " Dale Cavese" in Europe. Ricardo Montaner performed a cover of the song on his 2001 album Sueño Repetido. In Indonesia, the song is titled " Kopi Dangdut" and was a hit in that country in 1991. "Coffee Rumba" has been covered by several Japanese artists such as The Peanuts, Yōko Oginome, and Yōsui Inoue. In Japan, the song's title is " Coffee Rumba" ( コーヒー・ルンバ, Kōhī Runba), written by Seiji Nakazawa and recorded by Sachiko Nishida in 1961. Mario Suárez covered the song in his 2002 album Moliendo Café.Īt present, the song has more than 800 versions in many languages. Julio Iglesias covered the song in the 1976 for his album America, which led to renewed interest. 11 track on the end-of-year chart in 1962. Mina's version topped the Italian singles chart and was the No. Lucho Gatica's version of the song peaked at No. Track listing No.Ĭuban singer Xiomara Alfaro's Spanish-language version peaked at No. The first singer to record " Moliendo Café" was Mario Suárez in 1958 Blanco did not record it himself until 1961. The lyrics of the song tells of someone who, while grinding coffee at night, feels frustrated at having to work instead of having a love life. A few years later, Perroni sued Blanco for appropriating the work, claiming that it was he who composed the song, and that his nephew had stolen the melody. According to Hugo Blanco, he composed the song in 1958, and since he was not of age (he was 17 years old), he asked his uncle José Manzo Perroni to register the work for him at the Sociedad de Autores y Compositores de Venezuela (SACVEN).
