Tarantella Napoletana
The "Tarantella Napoletana" is the tarantella associated with Naples. It is familiar to North American viewers of popular media as a quintessentially "Italian" musical riff or melody. Examples of its use include Gioachino Rossini's "La Danza" from Soirées Musicales (1830–1835). The tarantella was adapted into the 1950 song "Lucky, Lucky, Lucky Me" written by Buddy Arnold and Milton Berle, and performed by Evelyn Knight and the Ray Charles Band.
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Tarantella Napoletana
The "Tarantella Napoletana" is the tarantella associated with Naples. It is familiar to North American viewers of popular media as a quintessentially "Italian" musical riff or melody. Examples of its use include Gioachino Rossini's "La Danza" from Soirées Musicales (1830–1835). The tarantella was adapted into the 1950 song "Lucky, Lucky, Lucky Me" written by Buddy Arnold and Milton Berle, and performed by Evelyn Knight and the Ray Charles Band.
has abstract
A tarantela napolitana é a tar ...... Gioachino Rossini (1830–1835).
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The "Tarantella Napoletana" is ...... ight and the Ray Charles Band.
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Неаполитанская тарантелла, тар ...... узыкального риффа или мелодии.
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sound recording
Wikipage page ID
34,898,803
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,012,876,944
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Description
Performance by the United States Air Force Band's Air Force Strings
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filename
Tarantella.ogg
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title
"Tarantella Napoletana"
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wikiPageUsesTemplate
hypernym
type
comment
A tarantela napolitana é a tar ...... Gioachino Rossini (1830–1835).
@pt
The "Tarantella Napoletana" is ...... ight and the Ray Charles Band.
@en
Неаполитанская тарантелла, тар ...... узыкального риффа или мелодии.
@ru
label
Tarantela napolitana
@pt
Tarantella Napoletana
@en
Неаполитанская тарантелла
@ru