Bellini discography

The discography of Bellini, a German pop girl group, consists of two studio albums, two compilation albums, 11 singles, including 1 as featured artist, 2 promotional singles and 11 music videos. The first Bellini release was the debut studio album Samba de Janeiro in 1997, preceded by the massive chart hit of the same name "Samba de Janeiro", which heavily samples Airto Moreira's 1972 song "Tombo In 7/4" from his album Fingers, also released in 1997. This release was followed with the compilation album Samba de Janeiro - Non-Stop Best of Bellini and the sophomore studio album Festival in 2001 and 2014.

Bellini discography
Bellini at Saarbrücken in 2014
Studio albums2
Compilation albums2
Music videos11
Singles11
Promotional singles2

Albums

Studio albums

List of studio albums with chart positions
Year Title Chart Positions
GER AUT SUI
1997 Samba de Janeiro 63 26 47
2014 Festival

Compilation albums

List of compilation albums with chart positions
Year Title Chart Positions
GER AUT SUI
2001 Samba de Janeiro - Non-Stop Best of Bellini
2002 Brazil - The best of Bellini

Singles

List of singles with chart positions and album name
Year Title Chart Positions Album
GER AUT SUI
1997 "Samba de Janeiro" 2 3 2 Samba de Janeiro
"Carnaval" 93
1998 "Me Gusta la Vida" 79 30 46 Samba de Janeiro - Non-Stop Best of Bellini
1999 "Saturday Night"
2000 "Samba de Amigo"
"Arriba Allez" Brazil - The best of Bellini
2001 "Brazil (en Fiesta)" 71 79
2004 "Tutti Frutti" 78 Pura Vida Ibiza
2007 "Let's Go to Rio" 99 Festival
2014 "Samba do Brasil"

Promotional singles

List of promotional singles with chart positions and album name
Year Title Chart Positions Album
GER AUT SUI
2008 "Hot, Hot, Hot" N.A.
2010 "Samba All Night"
List of singles with chart positions and album name
Year Title Chart Positions Album
GER AUT SUI
2004 "Magalenha" (Mendonça Do Rio & Bellini) N.A.

Music videos

Year Title Director(s)
1997 "Samba de Janeiro"
"Carnaval"
1998 "Me Gusta la Vida"
2001 "Brazil (en Fiesta)"
2004 "Tutti Frutti"
2014 "Samba do Brasil"
"Tic, Tic Tac"[lower-alpha 1]
"Outro Lugar"[lower-alpha 2]
"Festa"[lower-alpha 3]
"Mas Que Nada"[lower-alpha 4]
"Brazil"[lower-alpha 5]

Notes

  1. The music video of "Tic, Tic Tac" has been released as part of a promotional video medley. The full music video remains unreleased.[1]
  2. The music video of "Outro Lugar" has been released as part of a promotional video medley. The full music video remains unreleased.[2]
  3. The music video of "Festa" has been released as part of a promotional video medley. The full music video remains unreleased.[3]
  4. The music video of "Mas Que Nada" has been released as part of a promotional video medley. The full music video remains unreleased.[4]
  5. The music video of "Brazil" has been released as part of a promotional video medley. The full music video remains unreleased.[5]

References

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