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Edward Maya & Vika Jigulina (Stereo Love)(Ext)(2009)

Eduard Marian Ilie (29 de junio de 1986, Bucarest, Rumania), más conocido como Edward Maya, es un cantante, compositor, dj y productor de música electrónica. Se graduó en el ‘George Enescu Music High School’ en Bucarest y actualmente es alumno de último año de la Universidad Nacional de Música de Bucarest. A los 19 años de edad compuso junto a Eduard Carcota la canción “Tornerò”, interpretada por Mihai Trăistariu, que representó a Rumanía en el Festival de la Canción de Eurovisión de 2006, obteniendo la cuarta posición. Tras esto, colaboró con diferentes artistas rumanos (Akcent, Shantel, Costi Ioniţă, Vika Jigulina, Cassa Loco, Studio One, DjRynno, Dj Sava, Marius Nedelcu, Blaxy Girls e Imba). En 2008 produjo el álbum que ayudó a relanzarse a la banda Akcent, apareciendo en el mercado musical internacional con éxitos como “Stay with Me”, “That’s My Name” y “Lover’s Cry”. En el verano de 2009, Edward presentó su primer sencillo como artista, “Stereo Love”, que alcanzó el número 1 en la lista de éxitos rumana. Poco después se convirtió en un éxito en muchos lugares del mundo. Después del éxito de la canción, Maya comenzó una gira por todo el mundo. Singles 2009 – Stereo Love 2010 – Close to you 2010 – This Is My Life 2010 – Desert rain Eduard Marian Ilie (născut 29 iunie 1986 în București), cunoscut mai bine ca Edward Maya, este un producător, cântăreț și compozitor de muzică român. A absolvit Liceul de Muzică George Enescu din București și este în ultimul an la

Buck Billo and Maxi sing “Chiseled In Stone” by Vern Gosdin. As country music swung back toward traditional styles in the 1980s, an inheritor of the soulful honky tonk style of Lefty Frizzell and Merle Haggard rose to the top of the business and notched hit after barroom hit. Sometimes he was known simply as “the Voice.” Born in Woodland, AL, Vern Gosdin idolized the Louvin Brothers and the Blue Sky Boys as a young man and sang in a gospel quartet called the Gosdin Brothers. When he was in his late teens, his family moved to Birmingham and began hosting The Gosdin Family Gospel Show on a local radio station. Gosdin and his brother, Rex, moved to Long Beach, CA, in 1961. They began performing bluegrass music in the milieu that gave birth to country-rock, joining a group called the Golden State Boys that evolved into the Hillmen, featuring future Byrds member Chris Hillman. Vern and Rex teamed up to sing country music as the Gosdin Brothers once again, had a Top 40 country hit in 1967 with “Hangin’ On,” and opened for the Byrds on occasion. Gosdin moved to Atlanta in 1972, raising a family and running a retail shop. But he never gave up on music completely. He performed at local clubs and began to gravitate toward Nashville, where Emmylou Harris, a friend of Gosdin’s from his California days, was laying the foundation for a neo-traditionalist style of country music. Around 1976 Gosdin and Harris cut a demo single consisting of “Hangin’ On” backed with a newly written song