Turn It into Something Special
"Turn It into Something Special'" is a song recorded by German recording artist Sasha. It was written by S. Esteban, B. Moore, Ronnie Louise Taheny and Michael Amoroso for his third studio album Surfin' on a Backbeat (2001), while production was helmed by Boyd Barber. Released as the album's second single, while also serving as the theme song for the 2002 German teleplay Die Affäre Semmeling, the ballad reached the top forty of the German Singles Chart.
"Turn It into Something Special" | ||||
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Single by Sasha | ||||
from the album Surfin' on a Backbeat | ||||
Released | 8 March 2002 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 4:41 | |||
Label | ||||
Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) |
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Sasha singles chronology | ||||
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Formats and track listings
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Turn It into Something Special" (Radio Cut) | 3:32 |
2. | "Turn It into Something Special" | 4:42 |
3. | "Turn It into Something Special" (Svengali's Remix für Elisa)) | 4:25 |
4. | "Why Does Everybody Hurt" (Quartette Version) | 3:33 |
5. | "Turn It into Something Special" (Instrumental Version) | 4:41 |
Charts
Weekly charts
Chart (2002) | Peak position |
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Germany (Official German Charts)[1] | 35 |
gollark: Is the approach of "stick magic function names in as methods" used by any other standard library or language feature?
gollark: * no dedicated support needed
gollark: What I'd really like is the ability to just go around defining operators arbitrarily like in Haskell, making the operator overloading basically just a consequence of traits with no dedicated support.
gollark: Well, they are generally Rust's standard method for overloading things/implementing shared behavior, so it's more sensible than magically named methods.
gollark: Operator overloading: traits are more verbose, but make *a lot more sense* and are more consistent.
References
- "Musicline.de – Sasha Single-Chartverfolgung" (in German). Media Control Charts. PhonoNet GmbH. Retrieved 2015-12-02.
External links
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