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The fourth series also has two theme songs. The opening song is titled GO-GO Tamagotchi! (GO-GO たまごっち!) by hitomi for the first 25 episodes and by Rie Kugimiya for the rest of the season. The first ending theme is titled RAINBOW by Hitomi and the second ending is titled Baby I by Ariana Grande featuring Taro Hakase. [citation needed]
Tamagotchi's Sparkling President, released outside Japan as Tamagotchi: Party On!, is a party video game developed by h.a.n.d. and published by Bandai for the Wii.The game was originally released in 2006 in Japan as a launch title for the system; it is the only Tamagotchi Wii game released outside Japan, with Namco Bandai Games releasing it internationally in 2007.
The song "Escape" was used as the ending theme to the Tsumihoroboshi-hen on the PlayStation 2 version of Higurashi no Naku Koro ni entitled Higurashi no Naku Koro ni Matsuri, while "Friend" was used as the ending theme to the Miotsukushi-hen on the same game. It was released the same day as the opening theme song single on February 22, 2007 by ...
It should only contain pages that are The Living End songs or lists of The Living End songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Living End songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Along with its English-language counterpart "Don't Think Twice", it serves as the ending theme song to the Square Enix video game, Kingdom Hearts III. [1] " Chikai" first appeared on Utada's seventh Japanese-language studio album, Hatsukoi , and was also included on the setlist of their Laughter In The Dark Tour .
Rachel Zegler’s vocals ring through “The Hanging Tree,” the first song to be released as part of the upcoming “Hunger Games” prequel “The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes.” The ...
"Hang On to Your Love" is a 1990 song by Australian singer Jason Donovan. It was released on 8 March 1990 as the second single from his second album Between the Lines, on which it appears as the second track. Written and produced by Stock Aitken Waterman, the song was accompagnied by a music video directed by Paul Goldman.
This song is an anti-drug message. In the chorus section, the phrase: "Oh Life", is repeated a few times, in an echo that fades falsely, depicting a heartbeat. ("Oh Life, Oh Life, Oh Life"). Before the song's ending, the "Oh" in the phrase is heard stronger, with the repeated phrase fading in the spoken coda section.