Mia foni | |
---|---|
Studio album by | |
Released | 6 April 2006 |
Genre | Pop |
Length | 1:07:34 |
Language | Greek, English |
Label | Virus |
Singles from Mia foni | |
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Mia foni is the debut album of Greek American singer Annet Artani. Released in early April 2006,[1] it features 19 tracks in both Greek and English, including "Why Angels Cry", the song that Artani performed in the Eurovision Song Contest 2006 in Athens, representing Cyprus. The album was released in both Greece and Cyprus, where it entered the top 10.
Track listing
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Intro" (The Early Years) | |||
2. | "Why Angels Cry" | Peter Yiannakis | Peter Yiannakis | |
3. | "Ola ta thavmata" | Nick Nickolaou | Annet Artani, Decanzo Smith | |
4. | "Goodbye Amor" | Pigasos | Pigasos | |
5. | "Sta dino ola" | Artani, Spiros Kasimis | Artani, Frank Vinci, Jimmy Santis | |
6. | "Pote xana" | Giorgos Mitsigas | Kostas Haritodiplomenos | |
7. | "Kainourgia agapi xekina" | Pigasos | Pigasos | |
8. | "Opou kai na'sai" | Pigasos | Pigasos | |
9. | "Love Changes" | Niv Davidovich | Artani | |
10. | "Stay (Meine)" | Artani | John Papadopoulos | |
11. | "To'ha oneireftei" | Matina Stilianoudis | Kostas Haritodiplomenos | |
12. | "Apple Juice" | Artani, Frank Vinci, Jimmy Santis | Artani, Frank Vinci, Jimmy Santis | |
13. | "Allou ego, allou esi" | Artani, Giorgos Mitsigas | Kostas Haritodiplomenos | |
14. | "Ti paraxeni agapi" | Tassos Vougiatzis | Solon Apostolakis | |
15. | "S'agapo" | Sota Tsotou | Kostas Hatzis | |
16. | "Outro" (The Early Years) | |||
17. | "Gia sena zo" | Dimitris Korgialas | Dimitris Korgialas | |
18. | "Ta'ha oneireftei" (Radio edit) | Matina Stilianoudis | Kostas Haritodiplomenos | |
19. | "Stay (Meine)" (Radio edit) | Artani | John Papadopoulos |
Release history
Region | Date | Label | Format |
---|---|---|---|
Cyprus | 6 April 2006 | Virus | CD |
Greece | 23 April 2006 | Virus | CD |
Charts
Chart (2006) | Peak position |
---|---|
Cyprus Albums Chart | 2 |
Greece Albums Chart | 8 |
References
- ↑ Bakker, Sietse (4 April 2006). "UPD Newsflash: Croatia, the Netherlands and Cyprus". ESCToday. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
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