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Almendra Silva Millalonco
Almendra may refer to: Places * Almendra, Salamanca, a village and municipality in the province of Salamanca, Spain * Almendra, Portugal, a civil parish in the municipality of Vila Nova de Foz Côa, Portugal * Almendra, Zamora, a village in the municipality of San Pedro de la Nave-Almendra, Spain * Almendra Central The Almendra Central ( en, Central Almond) is a zone of Madrid comprising seven districts: Centro, Arganzuela, Retiro, Salamanca, Chamartín, Tetuán, and Chamberí, (even though, sometimes, the City Council of Madrid includes part of an eighth, ..., city centre of Madrid, Spain Music * Almendra (band), a rock band from Buenos Aires, Argentina * ''Almendra'' (Almendra album), 1969 * ''Almendra'' (Aldemaro Romero album), 1957 {{disambig, geo ...
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Almendra, Salamanca
Almendra is a village and municipality in the province of Salamanca, western Spain, part of the autonomous community of Castile and León. As of 2016 it has a population of 166 inhabitants. See also * Province of Salamanca * The Almendra Dam The Almendra Dam, also known as Villarino Dam, in Salamanca, Spain, interrupts the course of the River Tormes five kilometres from the village from which it takes its name: Almendra (literally, almond). It was constructed between 1963 and 1970. ... References Municipalities in the Province of Salamanca {{Salamanca-geo-stub ...
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Almendra, Portugal
Almendra is a civil parish in the municipality of Vila Nova de Foz Côa, Portugal. See also * Fregeneda–Almendra pegmatitic field The Fregeneda–Almendra pegmatitic field is a geologic area in the Iberian Peninsula extending across the Portuguese district of Guarda and the Spanish province of Salamanca. Part of the , it is located in the western part of a narrow E–W metam ... Freguesias of Vila Nova de Foz Côa {{Guarda-geo-stub ...
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Almendra Central
The Almendra Central ( en, Central Almond) is a zone of Madrid comprising seven districts: Centro, Arganzuela, Retiro, Salamanca, Chamartín, Tetuán, and Chamberí, (even though, sometimes, the City Council of Madrid includes part of an eighth, Moncloa-Aravaca, specifically the Argüelles yard, all inside the M30 motorway. Population In 1975 1,153,730 people lived there, but since the 1990s, population has decreased steadily: in 2000 there were 915,318 inhabitantsMartínez Martín, Jesús A. «Madrid, de Villa a Metrópoli. Las transformaciones del siglo XX» ''Cuadernos de historia contemporánea''
2000, número 22: 225-249 Consultado el 1 de octubre de 2011
and in 2011 847,686. < ...
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Almendra (band)
Almendra was one of the most important rock music, rock groups from Buenos Aires, Argentina in the late 1960s. Led by guitarist and lyricist Luis Alberto Spinetta, Almendra released between 1968 and 1971 a few singles and two albums – ''Almendra (Almendra album), Almendra'' and ''Almendra II'' – that revolutionized the sound of Argentine rock for the remainder of the 20th century and almost single-handedly changed the way local rock music was perceived by critics and audiences. Widely compared to The Beatles by their local contemporaries, Almendra did not survive the 1960s and the making of a planned rock opera, though all individual members went on to form the backbone of Argentine rock in the 1970s. Formation Almendra was formed in 1968 after the breakup of three teenage school groups, Los Sbirros, Los Mods and Los Larkins. The initial rehearsals were held at Spinetta's house in Belgrano, Buenos Aires, Belgrano, an upper-middle-class neighbourhood of Buenos Aires. By mid ...
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Almendra (Almendra Album)
''Almendra'' (; Spanish for "almond") is the self-titled debut studio album by Argentine rock band Almendra (band), Almendra which was released in 1969 on Vik, a subsidiary of RCA Victor. To distinguish it from the band's next release, ''Almendra II'', it is also known as ''Almendra I''. The album represented the first full-length musical endeavour of nineteen-year-old Luis Alberto Spinetta, having formed the band in the mid 1960s along with Emilio del Guercio, Edelmiro Molinari and Rodolfo García. The famous artwork, showing a crying man with a toy arrow stuck on his head, was designed by Spinetta to embody the different lyrical themes of the album. By the late 1960s, the ''nueva ola'' phenomenon was losing popularity and Los Gatos (band), Los Gatos' debut single, "La balsa", had catapulted the emergence of Argentine rock. The success of Los Gatos paved the way for Manal and Almendra; the three groups are considered the foundational trilogy of Argentine rock, singing serious and ...
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