Nessaja

"Nessaja" is a song written by Peter Maffay and Rolf Zuckowski from the musical Tabaluga released in 1983 on the album Tabaluga oder die Reise zur Vernunft. The German band Scooter released a techno version as single on 8 April 2002. It features as a bonus track on the group's first live album Encore: Live And Direct, and was the first Scooter single to feature newest member at that time Jay Frog. "Nessaja" is one of Scooter's best-known singles, reaching number one in Germany and number four in the UK.

Music video

The music video for Nessaja opens with a limousine pulling up outside a large white mansion. Women in dresses and men in suits get out of the car and go inside the house. There are lots of people waiting for a 'show' to start behind a red curtain. When the music starts, H.P. Baxxter comes out from behind the curtain and starts rapping. The people start dancing and then there are some shots of women dressed in underwear and rabbit ears in the same room (although it is empty). The video comes back to Scooter for a while, then cuts back to the two women, who are now totally naked. The women are later seen in bathtubs, again naked. The rest of the video shows H.P. Baxxter rapping and people dancing and partying. At the end of the video there is confetti on the floor and everyone is asleep (apart from Scooter), Scooter then leave in a limousine.

Étienne

Étienne, a French equivalent of Stephen/Steven/Steve, is a given name which may refer to:

People

Scientists and inventors

  • Étienne Bézout (1730–1783), French mathematician
  • Étienne Louis Geoffroy (1725–1810), French entomologist and pharmacist
  • Étienne Laspeyres (1834–1913), French professor of economics and statistics
  • Étienne Lenoir (1822–1900), Belgian engineer who invented the first internal combustion engine to be produced in numbers
  • Étienne Lenoir (instrument maker) (1744–1832), French scientific instrument maker and inventor of the repeating circle surveying instrument
  • Étienne Mulsant (1797–1880), French entomologist and ornithologist
  • Étienne Pascal (1588–1651), French lawyer, scientist and mathematician best known as the father of Blaise Pascal
  • Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (1772–1844), French naturalist
  • Étienne Pierre Ventenat (1757–1808), French botanist
  • Intellectuals and academics

  • Étienne Balázs (1905–1963), Hungarian-born French sinologist
  • Étienne Balibar (born 1942), French Marxist philosopher and professor
  • Étienne (Canadian musician)

    Étienne is a Canadian singer. It is the stage name of Steven Langlois (born February 28, 1971), who is a Warner Music Canada recording artist. He has sold tens of thousands of CDs worldwide. Following a successful World Tour in 2007 that saw him perform sold-out concerts across Canada, the United States, and Australia,

    Étienne is a teacher with the Greater Essex County District School Board. Born and raised in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, he began performing at a young age. While attending the University of Windsor, where he graduated with a B.A. in French Language and Literature and a B.Ed., he began composing songs designed to help children learn English, French and Spanish using popular styles of music. Now residing in LaSalle, Ontario, with his wife and two children, he has taught English and French to students from grades one to twelve for the past sixteen years.

    Étienne writes for several widely used international school programs produced by leading educational companies including Thomson Nelson, Oxford University Press, Pearson Education, Prentice Hall, Ginn, Gage Canada and Denmark's Forlag Malling Beck. He has had his songs translated into the Cree language in Saskatchewan.

    Étienne (song)

    "Étienne" is a 1987 song recorded by French artist Guesch Patti, from her album, Labyrinthe. It was released as her debut single in late 1987 in several European countries. Particularly famous for its suggestive music video which was censored on certain TV channels, the song was a great success in France, Italy, Switzerland, Austria and Germany where it was a top ten hit.

    Lyrics, music and video

    The song was written by Guesch Patti and Vincent Bruley.

    According to the French Charts expert Elia Habib, the success of this song results from an alchemy between several of its components : "the voice of Guesch Patti in first, which makes a success of an interpretation very provocative of the song, alternating sensual moanings and passionate shouts ; the text of course, is full of suggestive sonorities ; the music, which play a large part in the success of the song in the production of the text, since the feline rhythmic of the intro until the nervous chord of the electrical guitar, and the videoclip, which is of an erotic esthetism carried by an arousing choreography".

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