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"Come into My Life" is a song written and recorded by Italian singer-songwriter Gala. It was released in November 1997 as the third single from her debut album, Come into My Life (1997). The song was produced by Filippo Andrea Carmeni and Maurizio Molella, and achieved success in Europe, South America, Russia and Middle East.
Gala Rizzatto (Italian: [ˈɡaːla ritˈtsatto]; born 6 September 1975), known mononymously as Gala, is an Italian pop singer and songwriter. Her debut album Come into My Life included the multiplatinum singles "Freed from Desire", "Let a Boy Cry" and "Come into My Life" which reached the Top 3 in music charts across Europe, South America, Russia and the Middle East.
The UK channel 4 teletext page 'Planet Sound' gave the album 3 out of 5, praising Gala for the "surprising variety". Of the few high-profile reviews available to read online, the AllMusic review by Dean Carlson awarded the album 1.5 stars stating "Gala was one of the first pop stars to graft a classical Italian outlook onto old-school acid techno.
The DEx12 expressway (Romanian: Drumul expres DEx12), also known as the Pitești–Craiova Expressway (Romanian: Drumul expres Pitești–Craiova), is a partially built expressway in the south-western part of Romania, previously labelled as A12, when it was considered as a future motorway. [1]
It should only contain pages that are Gala (singer) songs or lists of Gala (singer) songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Gala (singer) songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
I. I Believe (Happy Clappers song) I Can't Live Without You; I Don't Wanna Wait (Hanaumi song) I Found You (The Wanted song) I Wanna B with U; I Want That (song)
Minto of Rivista Studio called the clip "spectacular", although noting that the dance scenes were "out-of-context" and the special effects low quality and "botched". [52] In the book Von Hora, Doina und Lăutaren , Marina Cap-Bun elaborates on the possibility that the video alludes to the Zburător myth. [ 49 ]
On 24 January 1990, after the Romanian Revolution, it was officially replaced by the current anthem „Deșteaptă-te, române!”. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Before 1977, the country's national anthem was „ E scris pe tricolor Unire ” , [ 3 ] whose melody is the same as that of the Albanian national anthem .