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"Un'estate italiana" (Italian: [uneˈstaːte itaˈljaːna]), "Un verano italiano" (Spanish: [um beˈɾano itaˈljano]; both meaning "An Italian summer") or "To Be Number One" is a 1989 song composed by Giorgio Moroder which was used as the official song of the 1990 FIFA World Cup held in Italy, the first to hold such distinction.
"Ciao ciao Italia" is a song used as the anthem for the Sweden national team during the 1990 FIFA World Cup in Italy. The song was written by Lasse Holm and Eddie Oliva and performed by the Swedish band After Shave. [1] The single peaked at 12th position at the Swedish singles chart.
Italy 1990 (also known as World Class Soccer in the United States and Italia 1990 in most of Europe) is a soccer video game published by U.S. Gold and programmed by Tiertex Design Studios in 1990. It features the 1990 FIFA World Cup held in Italy but is not part of the official FIFA World Cup series .
In the aftermath of the World Cup, Schillaci would go on to score only once more for his country, a goal in a 2-1 defeat to Norway the following year in a qualifier for the 1992 UEFA European ...
The English version of "Un'estate italiana", a song composed for the 1990 FIFA World Cup held in Italy Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title To Be Number One .
The sticker claimed that this song was the "unofficial World Cup Theme", referencing the 1990 FIFA World Cup. [7] A music video was created in which Cicciolina also makes a cameo appearance. [8] [9] The album version of the song is subtitled "(edited highlights)", despite the fact that the single is some three minutes shorter than the album ...
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FIFA World Cup songs and anthems [1] are tunes and songs adopted officially by FIFA (or by official broadcasters and partners selected by FIFA), to be used prior to the World Cup event and to accompany the championships during the event. [2] They are also used in advertising campaigns for the World Cup.