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The song went on to win the 1996 Awit Award for Best Produced Record of the Year, and the 1996 NU 107 Rock Award for Song of the Year.. After Magalona's death, the song was the one used in many of the tributes to the artist, including an audio-visual has been paid presentation from Eat Bulaga!, the noontime variety program of which Magalona was a co-host, and a short rendering of the song ...
Francis Michael Durango Magalona was born on October 4, 1964. He was named after Saint Francis of Assisi, whose feast day falls on his birthday. [2] He was the eighth of the nine children of actors Pancho Magalona and Tita Duran, popular film stars of the 1940s and 1950s. [3]
Kaleidoscope World may refer to: Kaleidoscope World (The Chills album) "Kaleidoscope World" (The Chills song), 1982 single by The Chills; Kaleidoscope World (Swing Out Sister album) "Kaleidoscope World" (Francis Magalona song) Kaleidoscope World (film), a 2013 Philippine hip hop musical dance film
"Kaleidoscope" was released on March 22, 2024, through AKW Records as the lead single from the soundtrack album of the 2024 Broadway musical Hell's Kitchen. The song is performed by American singer-songwriter Alicia Keys and stage actress Maleah Joi Moon .
Kaleidoscope World is a compilation album by New Zealand group The Chills, released in 1986 on Flying Nun Records [7] in New Zealand and on Creation Records in the UK. [8] The album was a compilation of early singles, plus all the Chills' tracks which featured on the Dunedin Double EP and The Lost EP .
While not strictly a single, and never released as such, Kaleidoscope World is regarded as an early Chills manifesto. [3] Written by Chills frontman Martin Phillipps , "Kaleidoscope World" was, like many other early releases from the Flying Nun label, recorded in very lo-fi surroundings, on Chris Knox 's four-track tape by Doug Hood in a room ...
Music video; on YouTube "Red Light" is a song by rock band Siouxsie and the Banshees. It is the ninth track from their 1980 album Kaleidoscope. It was co ...
The lyrics for the jingle were composed by George Goehring, who had written the original song's music, but not its lyrics. [11] Connie Francis' version served as the theme song for the 1993 British television series Lipstick on Your Collar. This was, however, set during the Suez Crisis of 1956, three years before Francis' hit single. [12]