All posts by Italian Sinfonia

From Sanremo to Tel Aviv

Festival di Sanremo winner Alessandro Mahmoud, aka Mahmood, will reportedly move on to the Eurovision song contest to be held in Tel Aviv this year, with the main competition occurring on May 18 – although a recent interview suggests he may be having second thoughts. Below is a helpful lyrics video, with English translation, of the winning Sanremo song, “Soldi,” from Youtuber MYESC.

Mahmood - Soldi | LYRIC VIDEO w/ English Translation | Eurovision 2019 Italy

Italy has won the event twice: Gigliola Cinquetti in 1964 with her most famous single, “Non ho l’età,” and Toto Cutugno won in 1990 with the lesser known “Insieme: 1992“.

In the US for the past few years, Eurovision has been broadcast on LOGO TV which has also streamed the show on their site. No news is available yet if the same will be true this year. In Canada, OMNI Television just announced they will be broadcasting the competition this year. The show was last broadcast in Canada in 2015.

Tiziano Ferro brings back the 60s

Tiziano Ferro’s current album, Il Mestiere della Vita, continued to show the singer-songwriter’s versatility and why Ferro has become the top selling Italian artist in the world.  He’s able to rule the Italian summer radio airwaves with happy pop  like “Lento/Veloce,” throw in some rap on “My Steelo,” and get serious with a love song like “Il Conforto.”  Of particular note to this poster is “Quasi Quasi,” a track that could be mistaken for a Mina cover; Ferro seems to be able to transport his voice to any era.

A touch of the 60s sound seems to always be part of the Ferro’s album mix.  In his previous album, Ferro channels Don Backy in “Paura No Ho:”

Tiziano Ferro - Paura non ho

Ferro’s love of the era also was shown on a track he wrote with Roberto Casalino for Giusy Ferreri, who made her radio debut with this single, “Non ti scordar mai di me.”   Her performance here reminded many of Amy Winehouse, herself a great admirer of 60s bands.

Giusy Ferreri - Non Ti Scordar Mai Di Me

“A Mano a Mano, ” a new international favorite

Recently in a Roman court, a lawyer who has written books on the death of singer Rino Gaetano  formally requested the courts re-open an investigation into the death of the singer-songwriter who died in a car accident on June 2, 1981 at age 30.  Gaetano suffered serious head injuries during the crash and hospitals in the area were unwilling to treat him due to lack of space and unavailable specialists.

Gaetano is best known for hits “Ma il cielo è sempre più blu” and “Gianna.”   Shortly before his passing, Gaetano took part in a concert series titled Qconcert with Riccardo Cocciante where he had performed a cover of a Cocciante single from 1978, “A Mano a Mano.”   In the song, the singer attempts to convince an ex-love to return to him – italian and translated lyrics here.

Rino Gaetano - A Mano a Mano

Although “A mano a mano” never charted, Gaetano’s tender grit quietly made the song a favorite of many in Italy and its popularity has increased immensely in the past few years.   It has become a staple in music reality shows, was featured in the soundtrack and trailer for the 2014 film “Allacciate le cinture,” and was part of the deluxe edition of Andrea Bocelli’s 2013 “Passione” album, cementing the single as an Italian pop classic to international audiences.

Below are the original and Bocelli versions of the ballad:

Riccardo Cocciante A mano a mano (con Mia Martini da "Festa d'inverno" 1977)

Andrea Bocelli - A Mano a Mano

Se mi lasci nella discoteca

The Library of Congress is set to honor the disco era with a series of events from April 12 to May 6 with the highlight being a performance from Gloria Gaynor, popular worldwide due to her disco anthem “I Will Survive. ”  The celebration honors the impact of disco on American culture but fair to say its impact was felt in Italy as well where disco took over mainstream pop in the mid-70s.

Marcella Bella was credited with the first Italian disco hit with “Nessuno Mai” and later she even recorded a disco version of “Resta Cu’mme”.  Lucio Battisti incorporated the disco sound in his latest releases and Italian disco music from Raffaella Carrà and Umberto Tozzi even became world-wide hits.  A favorite of that era and one that still enjoys great popularity today in Italy, with two recent films inspired by its lyrics,  is “Se mi lasci non vale” from Latin crooner Julio Iglesias.   The hit, written by singer-songwriter Luciano Rossi and actually released and recorded first by Rossi, was also done in Spanish by Iglesias and later released in English by Canadian Patrick Norman (“Let’s Try Once Again”).

Julio Iglesias - Se mi lasci non vale (1976)

Patrick Norman Let's Try Once Again 1978

Motown All’Italiana

Fifty years ago this month, the Supremes’ “You Can’t Hurry Love” was at the top of the Billboard charts and the trio were becoming international stars.   To help spread the music of Motown across the globe, founder Berry Gordy had his biggest stars re-record their music in different languages and Italian seems to have been the most popular.  Here’s an old NPR segment on the topic and samples of “L’Amore Verra / You Can’t Hurry Love” and Stevie Wonder’s “Il sole è di Tutti / A Place In The Sun” from Italian TV.

The Supremes - L'amore verrà

♫ Stevie Wonder ♪ Il Sole è Di Tutti (New Release) ♫ Video & Audio Restaurati

 

Gianni Morandi: singer, actor, runner, Pokémon Go trainer…

71-year old Gianni Morandi is still performing (wrapped about a sold-out tour with Baglioni this year),  is about to star in a new TV series (“Per amore di mia figlia”), continues to run in marathons, and has now added Pokémon GO trainer to his resume.  Over the weekend, the unstoppable Morandi announced the news of his capture of the elusive Pokémon monster Dragonite to his Facebook fans.

https://www.facebook.com/giannimorandiofficial/posts/10155416867978438:0

Gianni Morandi - Uno su mille

 

Lolliradio Italia for your streaming musica needs

While Italian Sinfonia would love to be back on the air again, a wonderful substitution is Lolliradio Italia, a 24-hour Italian music station, bringing you the best of Italian pop, old and new, from Battisti to Baglioni, Pausini to Mengoni.

Lolliradio also broadcasts 5 other themed stations including Happy, Soft (a mix of mainly English and Italian older adult contemporary tracks – think Lite FM), Dance (DJ remixes), Hits (international hits currently playing on Italian airwaves) and Oldies (a lot of English dance pop from the 70s and 80s).

The station has its own iTunes, Android and Windows app and can also be found on TuneIn so if you’re not by your PC, connect your bluetooth receiver or Chromecast Audio @ home and transport yourself abroad for a while.

A sample of one of the many classics to be found on Italia…

Gianni Togni - Luna (1980)

 

YouTube’s Italian Music Vault

YouTube user Flaniman2 is the man for all classic Italian pop music fans.  His channel is dubbed “Tele Ricordi (La TiVù che non c’è più)” and his posts are made up of performances from mainly the 60s to the  80s of classic Italian hits performed live on music and variety shows, with a bunch of international hits sprinkled in.

♫ Ivano Fossati ♪ La Mia Banda Suona Il Rock ♫ Video & Audio Remastered HD