Lena Zavaroni in South Africa

Lena Zavaroni in South Africa[1] is the third album by Scottish singer Lena Zavaroni, released in 1975 by the Record and Tape Company.

Lena Zavaroni in South Africa
Studio album by
Released1975
GenrePop
LabelRecord and Tape Company (South Africa, 1975)
Lena Zavaroni chronology
If My Friends Could See Me Now
(1974)
Lena Zavaroni in South Africa
(1975)
Presenting Lena Zavaroni
(1975)

Track listing

  1. "If My Friends Could See Me Now" (Coleman/Fields)
  2. "The Tennessee Wig-Walk" (Gimbel/Coleman)
  3. "Rock-a-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody" Lewis/Young/Schwartz
  4. "Kiss Me, Honey Honey, Kiss Me" (Timothy/Julien)
  5. "Ma! (He's Making Eyes at Me)" Conrad/Clare
  6. "Music, Music, Music" (Weiss/Baum)
  7. "Stage Struck" (Mercer/Previn)
  8. "Country Roads" Denver
  9. "Help Me Make It Through The Night"
  10. "Swinging on a Star" Burke/Van Heusen
  11. "What a Wonderful World" (Douglas/Weiss)

Personnel

gollark: > Modern SIM cards allow applications to load when the SIM is in use by the subscriber. These applications communicate with the handset or a server using SIM Application Toolkit, which was initially specified by 3GPP in TS 11.14. (There is an identical ETSI specification with different numbering.) ETSI and 3GPP maintain the SIM specifications. The main specifications are: ETSI TS 102 223 (the toolkit for smartcards), ETSI TS 102 241 (API), ETSI TS 102 588 (application invocation), and ETSI TS 131 111 (toolkit for more SIM-likes). SIM toolkit applications were initially written in native code using proprietary APIs. To provide interoperability of the applications, ETSI choose Java Card.[11] A multi-company collaboration called GlobalPlatform defines some extensions on the cards, with additional APIs and features like more cryptographic security and RFID contactless use added.[12]
gollark: Yes.
gollark: But instead they're actually quite powerful things which run applications written in some weird Java dialect?!
gollark: Which could all be done in Software.
gollark: As far as I can see, all a "SIM card" really needs is some sort of network-ID information, and then an asymmetric keypair to verify itself to a network and act as a user ID.

References

  1. Ref. Printed Material: Back Cover of LP main source of information
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