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View a machine-translated version of the Italian article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
The album was distributed in Spain, Colombia, Venezuela, Uruguay and the United States under the title Hay que venir al sur, and retains the artwork and track layout of the Italian version but with the songs translated into Spanish (except "Sono Nera" and "Amoa") with "Tango" replaced by its translation "Lola". In the Mexican version the tracks ...
Carrà was born on 18 June 1943 in Bologna [13] to Raffaele Pelloni and Angela Iris Dell'Utri (of Sicilian ancestry) and had a brother named Enzo (died 2001). [14] [15] [16] Her parents, however, separated shortly after the wedding [17] and Carrà spent most of her childhood between her mother's bar and the ice cream shop in Bellaria – Igea Marina. [18]
In 2020, Canarian singer Ana Guerra recorded a version of "En El Amor Todo Es Empezar", which is part of the soundtrack of the movie "Explota Explota" (a Spanish-language musical comedy based on the songs of Raffaella Carrá).
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.
Felicità tà tà is a studio album by Italian singer and actress Raffaella Carrà, released in 1974 by CGD.The album contains such hits of the singer as "Rumore" and "Felicità tà tà", which became the title theme of the 1974 TV show Canzonissima.
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]
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 one in Spanish for the same country. In Czechoslovakia the album has been distributed in 1984 with the songs in italian, with the title "Raffaella Carrà" [9]