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In 2008, a video of a performance of "Do It, Do It Again" appeared in the Doctor Who episode "Midnight". In 2011, French DJ Bob Sinclar sampled the original Italian version of "A far l'amore comincia tu" and included it in his single " Far l'amore ".
Carrà was born on 18 June 1943 in Bologna [13] to Raffaele Pelloni and Angela Iris Dell'Utri (of Sicilian ancestry) and had a brother named Enzo (died 2001). [14] [15] [16] Her parents, however, separated shortly after the wedding [17] and Carrà spent most of her childhood between her mother's bar and the ice cream shop in Bellaria – Igea Marina. [18]
Do It, Do It Again", an English version of "A far l'amore comincia tu", by Raffaella Carrà, 1977 Did It Again (disambiguation) Let's Do It Again (disambiguation)
Felicità tà tà is a studio album by Italian singer and actress Raffaella Carrà, released in 1974 by CGD. The album contains such hits of the singer as "Rumore" and "Felicità tà tà", which became the title theme of the 1974 TV show Canzonissima .
The 1959 and 1970 editions contributed to the launch of the careers of Nino Manfredi and Raffaella Carrà, respectively. [1] The 1962 edition, hosted by Dario Fo and Franca Rame , generated large political controversities due to some of Fo's satirical sketches being censored by RAI ; the couple was eventually fired, and the scandal lead to a ...
In the third season, Raffaella Carrà left the program and her position was filled by the father-and-son duo Roby and Francesco Facchinetti, the first-ever duo coach on the show. The fourth season saw the return of Carrà and the arrival of three new coaches: rapper Emis Killa , former 883 singer Max Pezzali and singer-songwriter Dolcenera .
The Sanremo Music Festival 2001 (Italian: Festival di Sanremo 2001), officially the 51st Italian Song Festival (51º Festival della canzone italiana), was the 51st annual Sanremo Music Festival, held at the Teatro Ariston in Sanremo between 26 February and 3 March 2001 and broadcast by Rai 1.
In Argentina the title was changed to "Raffaella Carrà", the same in the United States the following year (1983), where however the additional track was omitted [8] In Portugal and Germany, however, the version with the tracks in Italian was distributed, also in Mexico with the title changed to "Canta en Italiano" to distinguish it from the ...