Dida Drăgan
Romanian musician (born 1946)
Dida Drăgan | |
---|---|
Birth name | Didina Alexandra Drăgan |
Born | (1946-09-14) September 14, 1946 (age 77) Jugureni, Dâmbovița County, Kingdom of Romania |
Genres | Easy listening |
Occupation(s) | Pop star |
Years active | 1971–present |
Musical artist
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Dida Drăgan (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈdida drəˈɡan]; born in Jugureni, Dâmbovița County, 14 September 1946) is a Romanian singer who is famous for rock music in the muzică ușoară (easy listening) music of the 1980s.[1]
In 1993, she represented Romania in the preliminary round of the Eurovision Song Contest but having finished in seventh place, she failed to qualify for the finals in Ireland.
References
- ^ Denise Roman, Fragmented Identities: Popular Culture, Sex, and Everyday Life in Postcommunist Romania (New York: Lexington Books, 2007) ISBN 0739121189 "In the late 1980s, the most famous Romanian vocalist-stars of muzică ușoară were Angela Similea, Corina Chiriac, and Mirabela Dauer, together with the rocker Dida Dragan and the internationally acclaimed Aura Urziceanu..."[page needed]
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- Theodor Andrei
- Luminița Anghel
- Monica Anghel
Ovidiu Anton- Dan Bittman
- Cezar
Dida Drăgan- Elena
- Alex Florea
- Hotel FM
- The Humans
- Ilinca
- Mandinga
- Nico
- Nicola
- Mălina Olinescu
- Ovi
- Marcel Pavel
- Ester Peony
- Roxen
- Sanda
- Paula Seling
Sincron- Sistem
- Taxi
- Todomondo
- Mihai Trăistariu
- Vlad
- Voltaj
- Wrs
"Alcohol You"- "Amnesia"
- "The Balkan Girls"
- "Change"
- "D.G.T. (Off and On)"
- "De la capăt (All Over Again)"
- "Dincolo de nori"
- "Don't Break My Heart"
- "Eu cred"
- "Goodbye"
- "I Admit"
- "It's My Life"
- "Let Me Try"
- "Liubi, Liubi, I Love You"
- "Llámame"
- "Miracle"
"Moment of Silence"- "The Moon"
"Nu pleca"- "On a Sunday"
- "Pe-o margine de lume"
- "Playing with Fire"
"Rugă pentru pacea lumii"- "Tell Me Why"
- "Tornerò"
- "Yodel It!"
- "Zaleilah"
- Note: Entries scored out signify where Romania did not compete
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