La Maritza

[2] In France the song was released on an EP (La Maritza / Un p'tit peu beaucoup / Jolie poupée).

In Wallonia (French Belgium) the EP charted as a double A-side "La Maritza / Un p'tit peu beaucoup".

[4][5] 7-inch EP "La Maritza / Un p'tit peu beaucoup / Jolie poupée" (RCA Victor 87.074 M in France, RCA Victor TP-455 in Portugal)[6] 7-inch single "La Maritza / Un p'tit peu beaucoup" RCA Victor 3 10372 (Spain)[7] Vartan herself recorded the song also in Italian (under the title "La Maritza") and in German (under the title "Lied ohne Wiederkehr", meaning "Song of No Return").

[1] Seija Simola's version reached at least the top 6 in Finland in 1970 (according to the chart, courtesy of INTRO, published in the "Hits of the World" section of the 21 January 1978 issue of U.S.

[12] In 2012 it was covered by the symphonic metal band Therion on their album Les Fleurs du Mal.

The Maritsa River