Zumbi (song) - significado y definición. Qué es Zumbi (song)
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Qué (quién) es Zumbi (song) - definición

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Zumbi (song)         
"Zumbi" is a song by Brazilian samba-rock artist Jorge Ben. It appears on his 1974 album, A Tábua de Esmeralda.
Love song         
  • Fol. 28r of the Gruuthuuse-manuscript, with to the bottom right the song '[[Egidius waer bestu bleven]]'
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Love Song (song); Lovesong (song); Love Song (album); The Love Song; The Love Song (song); A Love Song; A Love Song (song); Lovesong; Love song (disambiguation); Love Song (disambiguation)
A love song is a song about romantic love, falling in love, heartbreak after a breakup, and the feelings that these experiences bring. A comprehensive list of even the best known performers and composers of love songs would be a large order.
A Song         
1977 STUDIO ALBUM BY NEIL SEDAKA
A Song (Neil Sedaka album); A Song (album); Alone at Last (Neil Sedaka song)
A Song is an in-studio album containing the works of American pop star Neil Sedaka. It was produced by George Martin and released in 1977 on the Elektra label in the US, marking the beginning of Sedaka's association with Elektra, which would run through 1981.

Wikipedia

Zumbi (song)

"Zumbi" is a song by Brazilian samba-rock artist Jorge Ben. It appears on his 1974 album, A Tábua de Esmeralda. Its title refers to Brazilian slave settlement leader Zumbi dos Palmares. The song's lyrics describe the scene of a slave auction, ending with hopeful speculation about what will happen when Zumbi arrives. The refrain "Angola, Congo, Benguela, Monjolo, Cabinda, Mina, Quiloa, Rebolla" evokes the African origins of the slaves up for sale in the song. This vocal by Ben accompanied only by percussion is interrupted by a short, rising guitar chord, which announces the climax of the song, with the reintroduction of the sound mass of the brass and the singing taking on more passionate and dramatic contours, alternating with figurative intonations, in the final execution of the chorus, interspersed with apostrophes ("my people!") and some improvised vocals.

The song has also been recorded by Caetano Veloso on the album Nights of the North.