Razzle Dazzle is the 17th album by Japanese rock band Buck-Tick, released on October 13, 2010. Graphic artist Aquirax Uno provided the illustrations for the album's cover. The limited edition came with a DVD of music videos and an interview. It reached number six on both the Oricon chart and Billboard Japan.
"Dokudanjō Beauty" was used as the second ending theme song to the Japanese version of Battlestar Galactica. This album version features Lucy, vocalist of the all-female rock band LAZYgunsBRISKY, singing the chorus. The single version of "Kuchizuke" was used as the opening theme for the Shiki anime, which began airing on July 8, 2010. The anime also used "Gekka Reijin", as its second ending song.
Razzledazzle is a BBC television programme for children that airs on BBC's CBeebies channel. It is an educational show that features Razzledazzle, a little orange CGI character with floppy ears and big eyes, voiced by Bethen Marlow.
The programme is designed to get the viewer to focus upon sound, and, by sliding down magical slides, Razzledazzle visits 4 areas, "Rhyme Time", "Chit Chat", "Bish Bash Bosh!" and "Once Upon a Tale".
"Rhyme Time", presented by Sarah Hope, invites the viewer to recognise an everyday sound, which is then set to a poem and often repeated, allowing for interaction. "Chit Chat" features children involved in activities with their relations, focussing on natural communication skills. "Bish Bash Bosh" involves children acting out simple rhymes which are easily memorable, accentuating rhythm, syllables and rhyme. "Once Upon a Tale", presented alternately by Mina Anwar and Patrick "Wink" Lynch, is designed to create stories using predictive and repeated elements, widening the viewer's vocabulary and allowing for plenty of physicalisation of the narrative.
Razzle Dazzle is a Canadian children's program produced between 1961 and 1966.
Razzle Dazzle may also refer to:
Take Me Away may refer to:
Furimukeba Ai (ふりむけば愛), also titled "Take Me Away!" is a 1979 Japanese film starring Momoe Yamaguchi and Tomokazu Miura and directed by Nobuhiko Obayashi. It is one of a series of idol films starring the "golden combi" (golden combination) of seventies idol film stars, Miura and Yamaguchi. It features the first foreign location and the first sex scene of the couple.
A piano tuner on holiday in San Francisco, Kyoko (Yamaguchi), meets Tetsuo (Miura), a Japanese layabout on the run from his debts in Japan. Kyoko tells Tetsuo she is a pianist who has come to San Francisco to kill herself. After enjoying a night in a bar full of exciting people, they become romantically involved, and she admits she was lying. Kyoko starts living in Tetsuo's apartment but then has to leave. She persuades Tetsuo to come back to Japan in September.
Kyoko comes back to Japan and returns to her job tuning pianos. She is hit by a truck. The driver, Okouchi, apologizes, and offers compensation. But she refuses the offer, saying the accident was her fault. He falls in love with Kyoko, and proposes marriage. However, Kyoko cannot forget Tetsuo. She mails several letters to San Francisco but gets no reply. She later discovers the bar at which he promised to meet her does not exist. She flies to San Francisco, and finds Tetsuo lying in bed. An American woman emerges from the shower topless. Kyoko runs away. Tetsuo runs after her to the airport but she has already left. Tetsuo decides to go to Japan in pursuit of Kyoko.
"Take Me Away" is the song recorded by the Dutch group Twenty 4 Seven. It was released as the third single from their second album, Slave to the Music, in 1994. Unlike previous singles from the album, the song did not feature any raps. The single was a hit in Austria, Germany, Switzerland, Sweden and Belgium, and peaked at number 11 in the Netherlands on the Dutch Top 40. (In America, "Slave to the Music" and "Leave Them Alone" were their only minor hits in that country). A studio video was shot in Johannesburg, Durban, and Cape Town (South Africa).
I don't have the time of day
I don't know what day it is
Someone's falling on my head
Get up, get up, we're going out on the raz
Razzle dazzle, call it what you want
To me it doesn't matter, it's where I belong
It's a matter of distinction, a real fine line
Between an orgy of destruction and a wonderful time
And this room's so cold and bare
And there's nothing here for me
I've got to find some heat somewhere
Get up, get up, we're going out on the raz
Razzle dazzle, call it what you want
It really doesn't matter when I'm bangin' on a gong
While someone's holding out to a willing congregation
And we can all forget about the state of the nation
Can't hear a thing but I see your lips are moving
I'm working on my thinking and I think it's improving
I'm going to get the blame so I might as well deliver
If only I can swim across this weird human river
I know I started out with the best of intentions
Some blinding inspiration and a few not-to-mention
And now I'm looking deep into the last dying embers
Shouting what are we doing here and nobody remembers
I've lost a friend or two
I don't know where they have gone
Now only one thing I can do
Get up, get up, I'm going out on the raz
Razzle dazzle, call it what you want
To me it don't matter, it's where I belong
It's a matter of distinction, a real fine line
Between an orgy of destruction and a wonderful time
Razzle dazzle
Razzle dazzle
Razzle dazzle