Yamaha Popular Song Contest - définition. Qu'est-ce que Yamaha Popular Song Contest
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Yamaha Popular Song Contest - définition


Yamaha Popular Song Contest         
The , generally known as , was a Japanese popular music contest which ran from 1969 to 1986. It was sponsored by the Yamaha Music Foundation and was held annually (later, twice a year) at the Yamaha Resort Tsumagoi in Kakegawa, Shizuoka, Japan.
Yamaha YFZ450         
  • Yamaha-built DOHC V6 Ford Taurus SHO engine
  • Three-time Grand Championship winner [[Kenny Roberts]] at the 1981 German Grand Prix
  • Yamaha Motor's West Coast administrative headquarters in [[Cypress, California]]
  • [[Yamaha XS650]] vertical-twin
MANUFACTURER OF MOTORIZED PRODUCTS
Yamaha Raptor 660; Yamaha YFZ450; Yamaha Motor Corporation; Yamaha Motors; Yamaha Motor; Yamaha Motor Company Ltd.; Yamaha Motor Co., Ltd.; Yamaha Marque; Yamaha Bruin 350; Raptor 660; Raptor 660R; Yamaha Raptor 660R; Yamaha Crux; Yamaha crux; India Yamaha Motor; Yamaha Motor India Company; Yamaha Raptor 250R; The Yamaha Motor Company; Yamaha Motor Company Limited; Yamaha Motor Co. Ltd.; Yamaha Motor India; Yamaha YXZ 1000R
The Yamaha YFZ450 is a four-stroke motocross bike manufactured by Yamaha Motor Company, introduced for the 2004 model year. By the end of the 2004 ATV racing season, three of the four National Championships were won by riders riding the YFZ450: Keith Little, Brandon and Bill Ballance and Brett Oakley including John Brown.
History of the Eurovision Song Contest         
  • 1974}}.
  • '''Belgrade''': Belgrade Arena, venue of the 2008 contest
  • '''Jerusalem''': International Convention Centre, venue of the 1979 and 1999 contests
  • 1988 contest}} for Switzerland.
  • 1970 contest}} in [[Amsterdam]].
  • 1998}}.
  • 1958 contest}} in [[Hilversum]].
  • ''Billboard'' Hot 100]].
  • 2014}}.
  • 1996}}, which remains a record to this day.
  • 1962 contest}} in [[Luxembourg City]].
  • 1966 contest}} in [[Luxembourg City]], as Jürgens celebrates his win for Austria.
  • "[[Save Your Kisses for Me]]" by [[Brotherhood of Man]] would become the contest's most successful winning song, selling over six million copies worldwide.
  • 1980}} in [[The Hague]].
  • '''Dublin''': Gaiety Theatre, venue of the 1971 contest
  • '''Stockholm''': Globen Arena, venue of the 2000 and 2016 contests
  • 1957 contest}} in [[Frankfurt]].
  • 1992 contest}}, [[Linda Martin]] was the first of three Irish artists in a row to win Eurovision in the early 1990s.
  • '''Malmö''': Malmö Arena, venue of the 2013 contest
  • 2007}}.
  • 2021}}.
  • 1969 contest}}.
  • '''Oslo''': Oslo Spektrum, venue of the 1996 contest
  • 2012 contest}} in [[Baku]].
  • '''London''': Royal Albert Hall, venue of the 1968 contest
  • 2004}}.
  • 2017 contest}}.
  • 1986}}, at 13 years old.
  • '''Lisbon''': Altice Arena, venue of the 2018 contest
HISTORY OF THE ANNUAL SONG COMPETITION
History of the eurovision song contest; History Of Eurovision; List of Eurovision Song Contest editions; The History Of The Eurovision Contests; List of Eurovision Song Contest Editions; The History Of All The Eurovision Contests
The Eurovision Song Contest () was first held in 1956, originally conceived through a desire to unite European countries through cross-border television broadcasts following World War II, and in doing so to test the capabilities of international broadcast technology. Following a series of exchange broadcasts in 1954, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) commissioned an international song competition, from an idea developed by Sergio Pugliese and Marcel Bezençon and originally based on the Italian Sanremo Music Festival.