Wikipedia
Lindberg is a municipality in the district of Regen in Bavaria in Germany.
Lindberg may also refer to:
- Lindberg (surname)
- Lindberg, Washington, a ghost town
- Lindberg (band), Japanese pop band
Lindberg is a Japanese Pop rock/ rock band that was active from 1989 to 2002 and again in 2009. After another hiatus it is active once again, announced in a New Year's announcement under the title "Re:LINDBERG".
Lindberg is a municipality in the district of Regen in Bavaria in Germany in the immediate neighbourhood of the larger town Zwiesel.
Lindberg is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Anna Lindberg (born 1981), Swedish diver, daughter of Ulrika Knape-Lindberg
- Carl Lindberg (1904–1984), Danish boxer
- Chad Lindberg (born 1976), American actor
- Charles W. Lindberg (1920-2007), United States Marine, one of the raisers of the U.S. flag at Iwo Jima
- Chris Lindberg (born 1967), retired Canadian ice hockey player
- Christian Lindberg (born 1958), Swedish trombonist
- Christina Lindberg (born 1950), Swedish actress and pin-up girl
- David C. Lindberg U.S. historian of science
- David R. Lindberg U.S. malacologist
- Edward Lindberg (1887–1978), U.S. Olympic athlete
- Gunner Lindberg convicted U.S. murderer
- Hanna Lindberg Swedish politician, the first woman in a communal council (1910)
- Hans Lindberg (born 1981), Danish team handball player
- Helge Lindberg (born 1887), Finnish opera singer
- Janne Lindberg (born 1966), Finnish former professional footballer
- Jim Lindberg (born 1968), U.S. singer-songwriter for the punk band Pennywise
- John Lindberg (born 1959), American jazz double-bassist
- John Lindberg (singer) (born ????), Swedish singer and guitar player, fronts the Swedish band JLT (John Lindberg Trio)
- Karin Kock-Lindberg (1891-1976), Swedish politician
- Knut Lindberg (1882–1961), Swedish Olympic athlete
- Magnus Lindberg (born 1958), Finnish composer
- Marcus Lindberg (born 1980), Swedish footballer
- Marie Lindberg (cyclist) (born 1987), Swedish road cyclist
- Marie Lindberg (singer) (born 1975), Swedish teacher, singer/songwriter and guitarist
- Morten Lindberg (born 1965), also known as Master Fatman, Danish media personality
- Odd F. Lindberg, a Norwegian freelance journalist, arctic explorer and film maker
- Oskar Lindberg (composer) (1887–1955), Swedish composer
- Oskar Lindberg (cross-country skier) (1894–1977), Swedish cross-country skier
- Patrik Lindberg (born 1988), better known as f0rest, Swedish Counter-Strike player
- Sextus Otto Lindberg (1835–1889), Swedish physician and bryologist
- Sigfrid Lindberg (1897–1977), Swedish footballer
- Sven Lindberg (1918–2006), Swedish film actor and director
- Stig Lindberg (1916–1982), Swedish ceramic designer, glass designer, textile designer, industrial designer, painter, and illustrator
- Tomas Lindberg (born 1972), Swedish singer
- Torsten Lindberg (1917–2009), Swedish football player and manager
- Ulrika Knape-Lindberg (born 1955), Swedish diver, mother of Anna Lindberg
- Ylva Lindberg (born 1976), Swedish ice hockey player
Lindberg is an album by Robert Charlebois and Louise Forestier, released in 1968. The album was originally released as Robert Charlebois avec Louise Forestier, but came to be better known as Lindberg after its most famous and influential song. Most followup reissues of the album used the Lindberg title, although the version currently available for sale on iTunes restores the original eponymous title.
Considered a classic of Quebec music, it was the first album Charlebois recorded after his visit to California in 1967. Incorporating psychedelic rock influences, it marked his evolution away from the chansonnier tradition of francophone pop music. It was also his first album to feature lyrics written and sung in the joual register of Quebec French.
The album was a transformative touchstone in Quebec's musical culture, almost singlehandedly shifting the province's dominant musical style from traditional chansonnier pop to contemporary rock and turning Charlebois into one of the province's key musical icons of the 1960s and 1970s.
In 2015, the Polaris Music Prize committee shortlisted Lindberg as one of the nominees for the 1960s-1970s component of its inaugural Heritage Award to honour classic Canadian albums.