Anders Engbergs

Anders Engbergs was a dansband in Skara, Sweden,[1] reestablished in 1994 when Lotta & Anders Engbergs orkester split up into two bands, Anders Engbergs and Lotta Engbergs, three years after the divorce of husband Anders Engberg and wife Lotta Engberg. Anders Engbergs had also been the name of the unsplit band prior to Lotta Engberg joining it in 1989. One of the more famous singers in its lineup up to 1988 was Stefan Borsch.

Anders Engbergs
OriginSkara, Sweden
GenresDansband music
Years active19942000

Björn Hedström, who was one of Anders Engbergs' singers, participated in the Swedish Melodifestivalen 1995 with the song "Du är drömmen jag drömt". Anders Engbergs had some Svensktoppen hits, but never achieved the same level of successes as Lotta Engbergs.

Charlotte Perrelli (then known as Charlotte Nilsson) had her breakthrough while in this band, laying the foundation for her later successes in Melodifestivalen as a solo artist.

Another member was Martin Rydnemalm, who later played the guitar and saxophone in Kim & Hallo.

In 1998 the band won the contest "Dansbandslåten" with the song "När kärleken slår till".

Discography

Albums

  • Glöm inte bort - 1995
  • Lova mig - 1996

Svensktoppen songs

  • Glöm inte bort - 1994
  • Du är drömmen jag drömt - 1995
  • Ge dej tid - 1995
  • Glöm inte bort - 1994
  • Av hela mitt hjärta - 1996
  • Kärleken i dina ögon - 1998
  • När kärleken slår till - 1999
  • Tusen år - 2000

Songs failing to enter the chart

  • En blå sommardag - 1997
  • Minnenas värld - 1997
  • Är du min nu - 1999
  • Det är sommaren som vaknat - 1999
gollark: ++remind 3d POTAT O GOOD <@160279332454006795> <@160279332454006795>
gollark: It allows arbitrary code execution, so you peasants must use ++exec.
gollark: <@!506482395269169153> you do not have magic powers.
gollark: +rule ly/ric:purple impl ements zo/ab:blue:property rg/le:blue:property
gollark: +rule ly/ric:purple implements zo/ab:blue:property rg/le:blue:property

References

  1. "Anders Engbergs" (in Swedish). Svenska dansband. 1996. Retrieved 13 February 2015.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.