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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.
After his first German-Italian single "Scusami" was a viral success and was streamed several million times on YouTube, he signed his first record deal with the label TeeAge-Beatz in 2009. His first compilation Io canto was released in the same year, followed by a European tour with shows in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.
In 1966, she recorded "Dio, come ti amo" ("God, How I Love You"), which became another international hit. [ citation needed ] One of her other songs, " Alle porte del sole " (released in 1973), was re-recorded in both English (as " To the Door of the Sun ") and Italian by Al Martino , two years after its initial release; "To the Door of the Sun ...
Renis was born in Milan.In the mid-1950s he met with Adriano Celentano, and the two started performing an impression of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis.In 1958, he was signed by the label "Combo Records", and released a few cover versions of Italian and American rock 'n' roll songs as lead vocalist of the band Combos.
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.
• Original German recording "Zwei kleine Italiener" and first Italian cover version by Conny Froboess (1962) • Eurovision Song Contest 1962: # 6 (German version) 11. "Un violino nel mio cuore" Sacha Richepin, Giovanni Rastelli: 3.13 • Released in Italy on MGM Records Single K 2056 • Original recording by Luis Mariano 12. "Violino tzigano"
Thus the new version of Vivo per lei became a tribute to music using the pronoun in the title: lei in Italian, ella in Spanish, elle in French, ela in Portuguese, and sie in German, as a metaphor. While the French and German versions have Bocelli singing in Italian, and Ségara and Weiss providing the French and German lyrics respectively, in ...
It was first recorded in French by Aznavour in 1964, and later in Spanish ("Venecia sin ti"), German ("Venedig im Grau"), English ("How Sad Venice Can Be" or "Venice Blue" cover of Bobby Darin), and most notably in 1971 in Italian ("Com'è triste Venezia").