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I Keep Hearing This Song Around Italy.

What is this one creepy christmas song I keep hearing?

It keeps playing on the music loop at work and I need to show it to other people because its so creepy but I have no idea who sings it.

Its a cover of "Santa bring my baby back to me" sung by a woman with a sultry voice, but instead of singing the whole song, she only sings the titular line over and over again. Slowly. While the music in the background is nothing like the cheery original but instead like a film noir movie at a scene when they find the body. All of these things combined makes it sound like she killed her boyfriend and is praying to santa to bring him back to life and it HAUNTS me.

And I need it to haunt other people too, because I sound like a crazy person talking about it without the proof. Please, what is the name of the artist?

What song first comes to mind when hearing the word “Argentina”?

Proud Mary by Creedence Clearwater Survival and as performed by Tina Turner.Tina survived a brutal relationship and the image of the song matched her story perfectly. She was going to keep on rollin’ and nothing was going to stop her. But where does Argentina fit in?Tina’s first husband, Ike Turner, was known to have a drinking problem and Tina tried desperately to save their relationship, even at times hiding the alcohol from him.One day he arrived home very late from a bar and proceeded to look for his alcohol which he couldn’t find. He immediately screamed out, “Where’s our gin, Tina!!!”“South America,” she answered.Unfortunately the night didn’t end well but she never gave up on her dream.

What is this Italian song I keep hearing on the Italian radio?

I hope that there's at least one person on Yahoo answers who knows this song. I live in Italy (but don't speak the language yet) and I keep hearing the same Italian song on the radio. It's driving me nuts because I want to know what it's about.

It's sung by first a man and then a woman. You might have no idea. In that case, please shut up and don't give me any stupid answers.

I keep hearing the song that an ice cream van makes. Am i hallucinating?

Everywhere i go i always hear the song of an ice-cream van and its getting to the point that im really paranoid and its really creepy because i am the only one that is in the area when it happens. The only time that someone else heard it was in the middle of a bloody forest?!! Really, i don't think an ice-cream truck would be in the middle of the forest! It's not just in my head because my friend heard it aswell. Is there any myths involving this sort of thing and has this happened to anyone else? Thanks.

Whats the name of the club song that sounds like its an italian folk song at first?

Yolanda Be Cool - We No Speak Americano

I would like to know who is singing the song from peroni-la dolce vita commercial...thank you?

"Baby It's You" was a song recorded by The Shirelles and The Beatles. The Shirelles took the song to #8 in the US and the Beatles covered it for their album Please Please Me.

The Shirelles
The song appeared on the album Baby It's You and was produced by Phil Spector.

The Peroni Nastro Azzurro brand, for which that short was made, also has its own website. (To find the interesting part, click on the "GB" button, which stands for "Great Britain". Apparently, they did their best work online for British viewers.) According to one report I found online, "visitors to the website will be able to download The Sapphires’ re-recorded Baby It's You soundtrack to their MP3 or from itunes. This was originally a hit for The Shirelles in 1960 and features on The Beatles debut album Please, Please Me."

Peroni Nastro Azzuro: http://www.peroniitaly.com

Source: http://www.e-consultancy.com/newsfeatures/361085/peroni-nastro-azzurro-adds-a-new-dimension-to-traditional-beer-marketing-with-the-launch-of-its-groundbreaking-new-website-created-by-mook.html

The Beatles
The Beatles covered the song, along with other older songs, for the album Please Please Me (1963). It would later appear in the US on the album The Early Beatles (1965) and was produced by George Martin. The song would appear again on the album Live at the BBC in 1994. The song was issued as a single in 1995 in both the UK and the US. It reached #7 in the UK and #67 on the Billboard Hot 100. (From Wikipedia)

70's or 80's song with whistling?

My guess would be "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" by Otis Redding but that came out in 1968.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzrXc68gN...

Whats that song that repeats nah nah nah nah etc throughout the song? As chorus I think..?

I keep hearing a song I like but only catch the end every time. I can't remember the rhythm exactly, but it just repeats a series of nah's while instruments are played and the very last time its sung the instruments drop out. Would anyone happen to know this song and who sings it? Its not rap, its more of a rock/pop im guessing and its a guy singing, with some other guys harminizing


Additional Details
when I say the chorus consists of nah's im not saying there are nah's it it... the chorus is legit all nah's

Nahnah naaaahnah naaahnah naaah nuh<- thats kinda what one line sounded like now that I think about it, if that helps

What does English sound like to foreign ears? Is it a pleasant language to listen to?

I'm italian and I've been living in England the past few years.At school I studied French and German and I only started to understand English in my early 20s at university. When you don't understand english you barely feel the difference between american and british, and of course the local accents are even less noticeable. Everything sounds like an undistinguished mutter which it's not particularly pleasant but feels kind of "modern" compared to how italian sounds like to us.There was a time, in Italy, when lots of people pretend to sing english songs, because it was "cool", most of us were listening at them without understanding the lyrics and making them up with random sounds that resembled the original.For me the best example is "when all the saints go marchin' in", which I sang for an entire life as "uen ol de sen go macinin" (to be read with phonetical consistency, like italian).So, an italian singer decided to write an entire song made of "mock english" words: it has no sense at all, if not for the occasional "all right".Here it is, to give you an idea.

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