A great artist has passed away this morning,after a concert yesterday in Montreaux.
He wrote tons of great songs, great lyrics and music.
His most famous song worldwide was "Caruso", but his discography was full of other great tunes,in different styles form Jazz to pop.Always with class and irony.
[youtube][/youtube]
Lucio Dalla, R.I.P.
Lucio Dalla, R.I.P.
“Men are apt to be much more influenced by words than by the actual facts of the surrounding reality.” I.Pavlov
MY YOU TUBE CHANNEL:
http://www.youtube.com/user/mesolimbicn ... sults_main
Lemmy: "Can you hear this horrible sound coming out of my monitors?"
Monitor guy: "No."
Lemmy: "Neither can I.Turn me up!"
MY YOU TUBE CHANNEL:
http://www.youtube.com/user/mesolimbicn ... sults_main
Lemmy: "Can you hear this horrible sound coming out of my monitors?"
Monitor guy: "No."
Lemmy: "Neither can I.Turn me up!"
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Re: Lucio Dalla, R.I.P.
Not familiar with him but since he meant something to you, R.I.P.
I will have to listen to his music a bit more . What you posted was relaxing.
I will have to listen to his music a bit more . What you posted was relaxing.
THINK: Porter Wagoner
I am the Undisputed Sex Symbol of the VVFF
NEWBEGINNINGS
NEWBEGINNINGS
Re: Lucio Dalla, R.I.P.
thnaks, PB, very kind.On that youtube vid there's the traslation of the lyric, an homage to the Tenor Caruso.He wrote that song after being in the Caruso suite in an hotel in Sorrento(he was there by accident, his boat broke down and so he was forced to stay there).He compesed the song on Caruso personalpiano.
His music was the soundtrack of several generations of people in italy and outside Italy too.Highly appreciated by critics and his peers,loved by many poeple.he wasn't afraid to experiment, and started as a jazz player( he played once with Chet baker) and then became a songwriter/performer on his own.He proved many times that you can change s tyles and stay true to yourself and still be succesful.
From Wikipedia:
Lucio Dalla
4 March 1943
Bologna, Italy
1 March 2012 (aged 68)
Montreux, Switzerland
Lucio Dalla, Grand Officer, (4 March 1943 – 1 March 2012) was a popular Italian singer-songwriter and musician. He also played clarinet and keyboards.
Dalla was the composer of Caruso (1986),[1] which has been covered by numerous international artists. A version of Caruso sung by Luciano Pavarotti sold over 9 million copies, and another version was a track on Andrea Bocelli's first international album Romanza, which later sold over 16 million copies worldwide. This piece is also on Josh Groban's album "Closer",[2] which sold over 5 million copies in the United States alone. The song is a tribute to the emblematic opera tenor Enrico Caruso. Maynard Ferguson also covered the song on his album "Brass Attitude", after having previously paid tribute to Caruso with his rendition of Vesti la giubba (titled as Pagliacci) on the album "Primal Scream".[3]
Dalla was born in Bologna, Italy. He began to play the clarinet at an early age, in a jazz band in Rome. The singer-songwriter Gino Paoli noticed Dalla's vocal qualities and suggested he attempt a solo career as an Italian soul singer. However, Dalla's debut at the Cantagiro festival in 1965 was unsuccessful probably due to his appearance and to his music, which was considered too experimental for the time. His first album, 1999, was released the following year. His next album, Terra di Gaibola (from the name of a suburb of Bologna), was released in 1970 and contained some early Dalla classics. His first hit was "4 Marzo 1943", which garnered some success at the Sanremo Festival. Regardless of its title, the song became popularly known as "Gesù bambino". "Piazza grande", which Dalla would sing again at Sanremo, was also a success.
At this point, Dalla made a decisive move in his career, starting a collaboration with the Bolognese poet Roberto Roversi. Roversi wrote the lyrics to Dalla's next three albums Il giorno aveva cinque teste (The Day Had Five Heads) (1973), Anidride solforosa (1975) and Automobili (Automobiles) (1976). Although these albums did not sell in large numbers, they were noted by critics for the unusual mix of Roversi's weird lyrics with Dalla's improvisatory, and sometimes experimental, compositional abilities. The duo had already broken up by the time the concept album Automobili was released. Roversi, who had been against the album's release, chose the pseudonym "Norisso" when it was time to register the songs. The album, however, included one of Dalla's most popular songs, "Nuvolari", named after the famous 1930s Italian racer.
Affected by the end of the collaboration, Dalla decided to write the lyrics of his next albums himself. This decision proved to be surprisingly good, and he soon emerged as one of the most intelligent and musically cultured of the Italian singer-songwriters. The first album of this new phase was Com'è profondo il mare (1977), in which Dalla was accompanied by some members of the future pop band Stadio. The title track or "Quale allegria" are today ranked among the best Italian songs.
In 1979, his popularity was confirmed by the success of the Banana Republic tour and album of 1979 together with singer-songwriter Francesco De Gregori, his band, and his friend Ron. The hit single Attenti al Lupo (1990) gave him wider success in Europe. He was invited for duetting on Pavarotti and friends, singing his own hit "Caruso" with Pavarotti.
His music was the soundtrack of several generations of people in italy and outside Italy too.Highly appreciated by critics and his peers,loved by many poeple.he wasn't afraid to experiment, and started as a jazz player( he played once with Chet baker) and then became a songwriter/performer on his own.He proved many times that you can change s tyles and stay true to yourself and still be succesful.
From Wikipedia:
Lucio Dalla
4 March 1943
Bologna, Italy
1 March 2012 (aged 68)
Montreux, Switzerland
Lucio Dalla, Grand Officer, (4 March 1943 – 1 March 2012) was a popular Italian singer-songwriter and musician. He also played clarinet and keyboards.
Dalla was the composer of Caruso (1986),[1] which has been covered by numerous international artists. A version of Caruso sung by Luciano Pavarotti sold over 9 million copies, and another version was a track on Andrea Bocelli's first international album Romanza, which later sold over 16 million copies worldwide. This piece is also on Josh Groban's album "Closer",[2] which sold over 5 million copies in the United States alone. The song is a tribute to the emblematic opera tenor Enrico Caruso. Maynard Ferguson also covered the song on his album "Brass Attitude", after having previously paid tribute to Caruso with his rendition of Vesti la giubba (titled as Pagliacci) on the album "Primal Scream".[3]
Dalla was born in Bologna, Italy. He began to play the clarinet at an early age, in a jazz band in Rome. The singer-songwriter Gino Paoli noticed Dalla's vocal qualities and suggested he attempt a solo career as an Italian soul singer. However, Dalla's debut at the Cantagiro festival in 1965 was unsuccessful probably due to his appearance and to his music, which was considered too experimental for the time. His first album, 1999, was released the following year. His next album, Terra di Gaibola (from the name of a suburb of Bologna), was released in 1970 and contained some early Dalla classics. His first hit was "4 Marzo 1943", which garnered some success at the Sanremo Festival. Regardless of its title, the song became popularly known as "Gesù bambino". "Piazza grande", which Dalla would sing again at Sanremo, was also a success.
At this point, Dalla made a decisive move in his career, starting a collaboration with the Bolognese poet Roberto Roversi. Roversi wrote the lyrics to Dalla's next three albums Il giorno aveva cinque teste (The Day Had Five Heads) (1973), Anidride solforosa (1975) and Automobili (Automobiles) (1976). Although these albums did not sell in large numbers, they were noted by critics for the unusual mix of Roversi's weird lyrics with Dalla's improvisatory, and sometimes experimental, compositional abilities. The duo had already broken up by the time the concept album Automobili was released. Roversi, who had been against the album's release, chose the pseudonym "Norisso" when it was time to register the songs. The album, however, included one of Dalla's most popular songs, "Nuvolari", named after the famous 1930s Italian racer.
Affected by the end of the collaboration, Dalla decided to write the lyrics of his next albums himself. This decision proved to be surprisingly good, and he soon emerged as one of the most intelligent and musically cultured of the Italian singer-songwriters. The first album of this new phase was Com'è profondo il mare (1977), in which Dalla was accompanied by some members of the future pop band Stadio. The title track or "Quale allegria" are today ranked among the best Italian songs.
In 1979, his popularity was confirmed by the success of the Banana Republic tour and album of 1979 together with singer-songwriter Francesco De Gregori, his band, and his friend Ron. The hit single Attenti al Lupo (1990) gave him wider success in Europe. He was invited for duetting on Pavarotti and friends, singing his own hit "Caruso" with Pavarotti.
“Men are apt to be much more influenced by words than by the actual facts of the surrounding reality.” I.Pavlov
MY YOU TUBE CHANNEL:
http://www.youtube.com/user/mesolimbicn ... sults_main
Lemmy: "Can you hear this horrible sound coming out of my monitors?"
Monitor guy: "No."
Lemmy: "Neither can I.Turn me up!"
MY YOU TUBE CHANNEL:
http://www.youtube.com/user/mesolimbicn ... sults_main
Lemmy: "Can you hear this horrible sound coming out of my monitors?"
Monitor guy: "No."
Lemmy: "Neither can I.Turn me up!"
Re: Lucio Dalla, R.I.P.
I'll have to let my brother know. He's into that music alot more than me. Thanks for the info. may he R.I.P.
I got Jesus in my fax machine. I saw Ho Chi Minh down @ Burger King. I dated Vinnie Vincent as a Drag Queen. I still don't understand a f**kin' thing.
I have come here to chew bubble gum and kick ass and I'm all out of bubble gum.
I have come here to chew bubble gum and kick ass and I'm all out of bubble gum.