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In 2008, a video of a performance of "Do It, Do It Again" appeared in the Doctor Who episode "Midnight". In 2011, French DJ Bob Sinclar sampled the original Italian version of "A far l'amore comincia tu" and included it in his single " Far l'amore ".
From 1992 to 1995 Carrà returned to TVE, conducting three seasons of ¡Hola Raffaella!, [21] for which she won three TP de Oro [51] and the early evening show A las 8 con Raffaella. [66] In the 1994–95 season, she moved to the Spanish counterpart of Fininvest, Telecinco, with the afternoon programme En casa con Raffaella. [66]
Do It, Do It Again", an English version of "A far l'amore comincia tu", by Raffaella Carrà, 1977 Did It Again (disambiguation) Let's Do It Again (disambiguation)
Applauso (in some countries released as Aplauso and Canta En Español) is a tenth studio album by Italian singer Raffaella Carrà, released in 1979 by CBS Italiana, her second to be also distributed in the United States. [1] The album reached 75th on the 33 best-selling albums in 1979 in Italy, peaking at 24th during the weekly charts. [2]
Spanish ( Spanish : Explota, explota ) is a 2020 Spanish jukebox musical comedy film directed by Nacho Álvarez, starring Ingrid García-Jonsson and Verónica Echegui . The film is based on songs by Italian artist Raffaella Carrà , with the original title being taken from the Spanish-language lyrics of her hit " A far l'amore comincia tu ".
The Italian and Canadian versions of the album have songs in both English and Italian, while the Spanish version has lyrics adapted to the language. In 1977, Raffaella Carra was nominated for the Canadian Disco Awards for this album. [1] As part of the Fiesta promotion, Carrà went on tour, visiting Argentina, Chile, Peru and Mexico in 1979.
"Pedro" is a song by Italian singer Raffaella Carrà, from her album Mi Spendo Tutto. In 2024, the song was remixed by German producers Jaxomy and Agatino Romero , leading to a resurgence in popularity.
In Argentina the title was changed to "Raffaella Carrà", the same in the United States the following year (1983), where however the additional track was omitted [8] In Portugal and Germany, however, the version with the tracks in Italian was distributed, also in Mexico with the title changed to "Canta en Italiano" to distinguish it from the ...