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"Inamorata" is a song by American thrash metal band Metallica, first released on their eleventh studio album 72 Seasons as the final track, and as of its release is the longest original song by the band, being 1 minute and 13 seconds longer than the previous record holder, "Suicide and Redemption" from the 2008 album Death Magnetic.
The biggest selling recording of the song was sung by Dean Martin (issued as Capitol Records catalog number 3352), reaching number 27 on the Billboard chart in 1956. [3] Jerry Vale also had a major recording (Columbia Records catalog number 40634) of the song in the same year, which peaked at number 30. [4]
72 Seasons is the eleventh studio album by American heavy metal band Metallica, released on April 14, 2023, by their own record label Blackened Recordings. 72 Seasons was produced by Greg Fidelman, who produced the band's previous studio album, Hardwired... to Self-Destruct (2016), and is the band's second studio album to be released through Blackened.
Innamorata (song), a 1955 song; Innamorata (TV series), a Filipino drama series; Innamorata (album), an album by Pat Benatar; Innamorati, stock characters within the theatre style known as Commedia dell'arte
Inamorata is the Latin word for a person's female lover. It may also refer to: Inamorata, a 1984 album by Poco; Inamorata (novel), a 2004 novel by Joseph Gangemi; Inamorata (brand), a 2017 apparel brand "Inamorata", a song by Animals as Leaders from their self-titled debut album, 2009 "Inamorata", a song by Northlane from Obsidian, 2022
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The song's title, which is the same as its parent album, is based on a Francesco Alberoni book, Le Choc amoureux, meaning Innamoramento in Italian and s'énamourer in Old French. Farmer explained that the song is about the fact of loving "in its larger spectrum". [ 3 ]
The song was adapted into French under the title "Comment te dire" and was recorded by Joe Dassin. [2] In English as A Man Without Love and was recorded by Engelbert Humperdinck; In Spanish the song was sung as Cuando me enamoro, most famously sung by Angélica María. [3] In Japanese as Ai no hana saku toki (愛の花咲くとき), [4] and