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In April 1966 Rowe received a second gold record for the sales of "Que Sera, Sera". [40] In August 1966 Rowe won Radio 5KA's annual best male vocal award for "Que Sera, Sera". [41] In 2006 Rowe released a newly recorded version, which was released by ABC via iTunes, and later adding "the whole digital mix with a radio mix and a dance mix". [42]
Unlike Me & My Katamari, the majority of the music for the game was original, though a few tracks from earlier in the series were remixed. [24] Katamari Suteki Damacy (塊ステキ魂, Katamari Suteki Damashii, lit. "Clump Lovely Spirit") is the soundtrack album for the game.
He also contributed his voice to the English-language song Que Sera Sera in the PlayStation 2 videogame Katamari Damacy and performed the Japanese translation of Secret Agent Man [citation needed]. He is also performing for the opening theme 『下弦の月』 (Kagen no tsuki, waning moon) of the anime series Mononoke.
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"Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)", a 1956 popular song recorded by Doris Day; Whatever Will Be, Will Be, a Hong Kong musical and drama; Whatever Will Be, Will Be, a Hong Kong erotic drama; Whatever Will Be, Will Be, a Singaporean television series
The digital single "Que Sera Sera" from the album was released on April 25 as the theme song for At Least on Sunday Night, [2] with the music video premiering later that day. [3] The song was also used to promote Spotify. [4] Concept photos for the album were released on May 13 and 26, [5] and the album jacket was released on May 27. [6]
The French translation here is wrong -- "ce qui sera sera" means "who will be, will be." "Ce que sera sera" would mean "what will be will be," so I think the title is probably closest to French. However, to actually say "Whatever happens will happen," you'd probably want to say "Ce que se passera se passera."
The song is an amalgam of Jay Livingston/Ray Evans's "Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)" and John Lennon/Yoko Ono's "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)". Originally intended for release only when "world peace [is] established" (i.e. "never" and in "no formats"), [1] it was released as a limited edition single in Israel and Palestine in November ...