Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Gigi l'amoroso" (old-fashioned Italian for 'Gigi the lover') is a song recorded by French Italian singer Dalida. It was written by Michaële [], Lana and Paul Sebastian.. The song was released as a single in January 1974 with the song "Il venait d'avoir 18 ans" on the B-si
" Il venait d'avoir 18 ans" (pronounced [il vənɛ davwaʁ diz‿ɥit‿ɑ̃]; "He had just turned 18") is a French-language song by singer Dalida, first released on album Julien in the second half of 1973. [1] The song was a success and has become one of Dalida's signature tracks.
In France, the song charted for 21 weeks on the top 50, from 5 December 1987 to 23 April 1988. It entered at number 17 and reached the top ten three weeks later. It peaked at number two for five non consecutive weeks, but was unable to dislodge Guesch Patti 's " Étienne ", then Sabrina 's " Boys (Summertime Love) " which topped the chart then.
Like another famous children's song, "Au clair de la lune", it has an adult theme - in this case, one of lost love.The song speaks of a lover bathing in a fountain, hearing a nightingale singing, and thinking about her lover whom she lost long ago after refusing a bouquet of roses he was offering her, most likely symbolizing him proposing to her.
In 2004, the song was covered by Star Academy 4 in France, under the shorter name "Laissez-moi danser".This version was released as single in September 2004 and was successful, reached number one for six weeks on the French and Belgian Singles Charts.
A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at [[:fr:Tout chante autour de moi]]; see its history for attribution. You may also add the template {{Translated|fr|Tout chante autour de moi}} to the talk page. For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
"Babacar" is a 1987 song recorded by French singer France Gall. Written by Michel Berger , it was the first single from the album of the same name . Released on 3 April 1987, it reached the top 20 in France and West Germany.
Cover of sheet music for "Les reines de Mabille", a song about the Bal Mabille composed by A. Pilati, with lyrics by Gustave Nadaud. Balzac mentions the Bal Mabille several times in La Comédie humaine as a place frequented by the kind of prostitute known at the time as a lorette, [10] and a poem by Louis Aragon contains the line "Le secret de Paris n'est pas au bal Mabille" - "The secret of ...