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Below is an alphabetical list of songs recorded by Italian singer Mina in the period from 1958 to the present. During her long career, the singer has recorded over two thousand songs in Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, German, Neapolitan, Turkish and Japanese.
This is a partial alphabetical list of all the songs known to have been recorded and/or performed by, or featuring Milva, between 1959 and 2012.Over 1200 of her songs are listed below, organised by language and listed in chronological order of recording, performance, and/or release.
Quando m'innamoro" is a 1968 Italian song written by Daniele Pace, Mario Panzeri and Roberto Livraghi and sung with a double performance by Anna Identici and by The Sandpipers at the 1968 Sanremo Music Festival, in which it came 6th.
Salvatore "Toto" Cutugno (Italian: [ˈtɔːto kuˈtuɲɲo]; 7 July 1943 – 22 August 2023) was an Italian pop singer-songwriter, musician, and television presenter. He was best known for his worldwide hit song, "L'Italiano", released on his 1983 album of the same title.
Riassunti d'amore is a box set by Italian singer Mina, released on 12 June 2009 by GSU and distributed by Sony Music Italy. The box set includes five compilations with songs recorded by Mina from 1994 to 2007. The compilations were also released separately, all of them debuted on the Italian album chart. [3]
Io t’amerò (a.k.a. Yo te amo; 1986) Las cosas del amor (1975) Las palabras corrientes (1986) Los niños del Pireo (1960) Mi querido señor (1975) Morir cantando (1986) No es el adios (1961) No me puedo quejar (1961) Por el teléfono (1986) Por no vivir a solas (1974) Si el amor se acaba me voy (1982) Soleil mi sol (1986) Tenia dieciocho ...
In 1996, Ranieri provided the speaking and the singing voice of Quasimodo in the Italian-Language version of Disney's The Hunchback of Notre Dame. He even reprised this role in the sequel . In 2004, he starred in his first French film, a trilogy series called Les Parisiens , where he played a street artist.
Arranged and conducted by Tony Osborne, the Connie Francis version of the song was a number two hit in the UK, [9] and peaked at number eight on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. [10] The song in German (as well as in Dutch and in English) was recorded by Dutch child singer Heintje Simons for his album Heintje in 1967 (lyrics written by Bruno Balz ...