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Magic Number (マジックナンバー) is Maaya Sakamoto's eighteenth single. The title track was used as the opening theme for the anime Kobato . The live version of Kazamidori and Pocket wo Kara ni Shite are from her concert at Tokyo International Forum Hall A on January 24, 2009 with live arrangement by Shin Kōno.
Individuals who dropped their last name and substituted their middle name as their last name are listed. Those with a one-word stage name are listed in a separate article. In many cases, performers have legally changed their name to their stage name. [1] Note: Many cultures have their own naming customs and systems, some rather intricate.
/ Oh, oh, oh / It's magic..." Appears during the song's fade-out. The backmasked message is the chorus of Pilot's earlier song, "Magic". Bassist David Paton remarked: "We always meant to have something else there and after the success of 'Magic' the idea just came up in the studio for all of us to sing the chorus of 'Magic' on the fade. I think ...
The Magic Numbers in 2006, left to right: Angela Gannon, Romeo Stodart, Michele Stodart (not pictured: Sean Gannon behind drum kit.) On the back of releasing just one commercially available single, "Forever Lost", and even before their debut album was released, they played a sold-out show to a crowd of over 2,000 at The Forum in Kentish Town ...
Magic Number (game), a pricing game on The Price is Right "Magic Number" (song), a song by Maaya Sakamoto "The Magic Number", a 1990 song by De La Soul from 3 Feet High and Rising; The Magic Numbers, a British rock band; Magic Numbers or Hannah Fry's Magic Numbers, a 2018 series of episodes about Mathematics, presented by Hannah Fry.
"Ain't It Funny" is a song by American singer Jennifer Lopez. It was written by Lopez and Cory Rooney for the Adam Shankman -directed romantic comedy The Wedding Planner (2001). Shankman, however, felt that the song had too much of a Latin -influence to be featured in the film, and it was instead included on Lopez's second studio album, J.Lo ...
It was the first single from their debut album Funny How Sweet Co-Co Can Be and became their first chart hit, peaking at number 13 on the UK Singles Chart. [3] Robin Carmody of Freaky Trigger described the "particularly fine" song as the strongest example of the Sweet's early bubblegum sound, before the group's music became heavier. [1]
"Shadilay" is an Italo disco song by the Italian band P.E.P.E., [a] released in 1986 by the music label Magic Sound. [3] It was written by Italian singer-songwriter Marco Ceramicola, who sang under the pseudonym of Manuele Pepe.