Roberto Vecchioni

Started by Geno, February 06, 2017, 04:25:27 AM

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Geno

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Michele Massimo Roberto Vecchioni, known as Roberto Vecchioni (Carate Brianza, June 25, 1943), is a songwriter, lyricist, writer, poet, teacher, and Italian actor.

He has won four major prizes of Italian music: the Tenco Prize in 1983, the Festivalbar in 1992, the Festival of San Remo and the Premio Mia Martini critics in 2011; also he won the Premio Lunezia Anthology 2013. It is considered one of the most important Italian songwriters, influential and stylistically heterogeneous: in his work, is recurring the interweaving of his being with the most diverse myths of history, literature or art, the latter borrowed, not so much to describe the deeds rather as a way to represent a part of himself.

From 1969 to 2004 he also served as a high school teacher, in many classical high schools in the provinces of Milan and Brescia. He has taught and held various university courses as a lecturer.

After early successes as a songwriter, Flack succeeds in 1968 to account for Durium a 45, containing the Side A The rain and the park and on the back a disc randomly selected both tracks of music by Lo Vecchio, but the disc He goes unnoticed, and Flack must wait three years before getting the trust of a new record label, Ducale, founded by David Matalon, former owner of Italdisc and historical discoverer of Mina.

For the Ducal Vecchioni affects, in 1971, his first album Parabola, album that contains one of his most famous songs, Lights in San Siro, followed a year later by End-of-season; Again in 1972 he collaborates with Donatella Moretti, for which he wrote three songs of the album Third Parties (Antonio and Giuseppe Orlando and girl parts).

In 1971 he writes the Inter anthem, the team which is known supporter, spatial Inter, music by Renato Walls and sung by the footballer Mario Bertini.

In 1973 he receives the prize of the Italian record critics for the album The King is not having fun. In the same year he participated in the Sanremo Festival as a composer and performer of The man who plays the sky dice, intimate song dedicated to his father, who is ranked eighth.

In 1974 he participates in a disc for the summer with the song The Japanese butterfly, but goes unnoticed, and that it is also his last recording for the Ducale; in fact passes to Philips, which will get the first sales successes, thanks to hypertension and especially to Elixir, whose Velasquez and Daughter songs are often sent the first free radio.

In 1975, it has a good reputation thanks to the songs of the cartoon series Barbapapa, whose songs were also sung by Orietta Berti and Claudio Lippi.
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Geno

#1
El Bandolero Stanco - Roberto Vecchioni

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=huH0VAcHj0U

El bandolero tired, published in 1997, is an album recorded by singer-songwriter Roberto Vecchioni.
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