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The song was released as a single in 1978 for the first time together with a remake of "Città vuota (It's a Lonely Town)" and managed to reach number four on the Italian chart. The live version of the song was included in the album Mina Live '78 (1978), and the studio version was published on the compilation Del mio meglio numero sette (1983).
"Ancora qui" (lit. ' Still here ') is a song recorded by Italian singer Elisa.The song was released on 4 January 2013 as the second single form the soundtrack album of the Quentin Tarantino's 2012 film Django Unchained.
The word encore comes from the French encore, which means 'again, some more'; however, it is not used this way in French, but it is ancora in Italian. [21] French speakers commonly use instead either une autre ('another'), un rappel ('a return, curtain call ') or the Latin bis ('second time') in the same circumstances.
The song also made the Cash Box Best-Selling Records chart that year, peaking at number 12. Vic Damone included the song on his album Angela Mia (1958). [6] Jerry Vale recorded the song for his album Arrivederci, Roma (1963). [7] A song of the same title was recorded by Perry Como in 1951 [8] but credited to Larry Stock.
According to a 1969 report from SEDRIM (from Società per l'Esercizio dei Diritti di Riproduzione Meccanica), then Italian mechanical rights society, Italy was a singles-market with songs accounting 85.8 percent of total record sales in the country. A "top hit" single in Italy at that time was grouped between 500,000 and 700,000 copies.
"Hier encore", whose original French title translates to "Just yesterday" or "Not so long ago", is a song composed by Georges Garvarentz and written by Charles Aznavour and released in September 1964.
On 3 April 1976, the Eurovision Song Contest was held at the Nederlands Congresgebouw in The Hague hosted by Nederlandse Omroep Stichting (NOS), and broadcast live throughout the continent. Al Bano and Romina Power performed "We'll Live It All Again" in English-Italian thirteenth on the night, following Spain 's " Sobran las palabras " by ...
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