Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Celentano performed the song at least twice on Italian television. In the fourth episode of the 1974 variety series Milleluci, he dances with Raffaella Carrà, who lip-syncs to Mori's vocals. In an episode of Formula Due, a TV show hosted by Loretta Goggi, the song appears in a comedy sketch in which he portrays a teacher. Video clips of both ...
During an interview released to Italian newspaper Il Secolo XIX, when asked to comment on the success of the song, Jovanotti claimed that "the thing that worked was authenticity. It is a very simple song, with an ABC melody, a harmonic progression which is the usual one. I liked it since the moment when I wrote it, I couldn't change anything of it.
"Say It" is a single by the pop band ABC, with additional remixing by the team behind the Italian house music group Black Box. It was released in 1991 as a 7" single, 12" single and CD single. Critical reception
According to a 1969 report from SEDRIM (from Società per l'Esercizio dei Diritti di Riproduzione Meccanica), then Italian mechanical rights society, Italy was a singles-market with songs accounting 85.8 percent of total record sales in the country. A "top hit" single in Italy at that time was grouped between 500,000 and 700,000 copies.
(song) to be danced to Battaglia: battle: An instrumental or vocal piece suggesting a battle Bergamasca: from Bergamo: A peasant dance from Bergamo: Burletta: a little joke: A light comic or farcical opera Cabaletta: from copola (couplet) A two-part musical form Cadenza: falling: A florid solo at the end of a performance Cantata: sung: A piece ...
"The ABC Song" was first copyrighted in 1835 by Boston music publisher Charles Bradlee. The melody is from a 1761 French music book and is also used in other nursery rhymes like "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star", while the author of the lyrics is unknown. Songs set to the same melody are also used to teach the alphabets of other languages.
This is a list of the number-one hits of 1970 on Italian Hit Parade Singles Chart. [1] Issue Date Song Artist January 3 "Belinda" Gianni Morandi: January 10
The song was one of the most common songs during the Third Italian War of Independence (1866). [28] At the Capture of Rome on 20 September 1870, the last step in Italian unification, choirs sang it together with "La bella Gigogin" and the "Marcia Reale"; [35] [37] and "Il Canto degli Italiani" received bersaglieri fanfare. [38]