Ornella Vanoni

Italian singer

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  • Pop
  • jazz
Occupation(s)
  • Singer
Years active1960–present
Musical artist

Ornella Vanoni OMRI (Italian pronunciation: [orˈnɛlla vaˈnoːni]; born 22 September 1934) is an Italian singer. She is one of the longest-standing Italian artists, having started performing in 1956. She has released about 112 works between LP, EPs and greatest hits albums, and is considered one of the most popular interpreters of Italian pop music. During her long career she has sold over 65 million records.[1]

Artistic career

Vanoni started her artistic career in 1960 as a theatre actress. She mostly performed in Bertolt Brecht works, under the direction of Giorgio Strehler at his Piccolo Teatro in Milan. At the same time, she started a music career. The folklore and popular songs she explored in her early records, especially the ones about the criminal underworld in Milan, resulted in her receiving the nickname cantante della mala ("Underworld Singer") for singing Milanese songs on that genre.[citation needed]

Vanoni scored two major hits in 1963 with "Senza Fine" and "Che cosa c'è", both written for her by Gino Paoli. In 1964 she won the Festival of Neapolitan song with "Tu si na cosa grande". In the following years, she took part in a series of Festivals of Italian song in Sanremo with the songs "Abbracciami forte" (1965), "Io ti darò di più" (1966), "La musica è finita" (1967), "Casa Bianca" (1968), and "Eternità" (1970). "Casa Bianca", which finished second in 1968, was the subject of a copyright dispute between the composer of the song, Don Backy, and the Clan Celentano label.[citation needed]

In the late 1960s, Vanoni recorded "Una ragione di più", "Un'ora sola ti vorrei", "L'appuntamento" (a cover of the Brazilian song "Sentado à Beira do Caminho" by Erasmo Carlos and Roberto Carlos)[2] and "Non Dirmi Niente", a cover of Burt Bacharach's "Don't Make Me Over". In 1972 she sang "Quei giorni insieme a te", the theme from Lucio Fulci's critically acclaimed mystery thriller film Don't Torture a Duckling.[citation needed]

In 1976, Vanoni collaborated with Vinicius de Moraes and Toquinho on the song "La voglia, la pazzia, l'incoscienza e l'allegria". During the 1980s, she released "Ricetta di donna", "Uomini", and "Ti lascio una canzone" (with Gino Paoli). In 1989, she returned to the Sanremo Music Festival with the song "Io come farò". In 1999, she recorded "Alberi", a duet with Enzo Gragnaniello. In 2004 she released an album of duets with Paoli to celebrate her 70th birthday.[3]

In addition to her music career, Ornella Vanoni was active in other creative fields, starring in stage and TV shows, movies. In January 1977 she posed nude for the Italian edition of Playboy magazine and requested a statuette by her long time friend the artist Arnaldo Pomodoro as payment. [4] The inclusion of her song "L'Appuntamento" (1970) in the soundtrack of Steven Soderbergh's Ocean's Twelve in 2004 sparked a worldwide renewal of interest in her music.[5] The soundtrack of the Danish film Toscana (2022, Netflix) also featured the song.[6]

Discography

  • Ornella Vanoni (1961)
  • Caldo (1965)
  • Ornella (1966)
  • Ornella Vanoni (1967)
  • Ai miei amici cantautori (1968)
  • Io si - Ai miei amici cantautori n°2 (1969)
  • Ah! L'amore l'amore quante cose fa fare l'amore (1971)
  • Un gioco senza età (1972)
  • Dettagli (1973)
  • Ornella Vanoni e altre storie (1973)
  • A un certo punto (1973)
  • La voglia di sognare (1974)
  • Quei giorni insieme a te (1974)
  • Uomo mio, bambino mio (1975)
  • La voglia, la pazzia, l'incoscienza, l'allegria (1976)
  • Più (1976)
  • Io dentro (1977)
  • Io fuori (1977)
  • Vanoni (1978)
  • Oggi le canto così, vol.1 (1979)
  • Oggi le canto così, vol.2 (1980)
  • Ricetta di donna (1980)
  • Duemilatrecentouno parole (1981)
  • Oggi le canto così, vol.3 (1982)
  • Oggi le canto così, vol.4 (1982)
  • Uomini (1983)
  • Insieme (1985, live with Gino Paoli)
  • Ornella &... (1986)
  • O (1987)
  • Il giro del mio mondo (1989)
  • Quante storie (1990)
  • Stella nascente (1992)
  • Io sono come sono... (1995)
  • Sheherazade (1995)
  • Argilla (1997)
  • Adesso (1999)
  • Un panino una birra e poi... (2001)
  • ...e poi la tua bocca da baciare (2001)
  • I concerti live @RTSI: Ornella Vanoni 5 Maggio 1982 (2001, live from a TV show)
  • Sogni proibiti (2002)
  • Noi, le donne noi (2003)
  • Ti ricordi? No non mi ricordo (2004, with Gino Paoli)
  • Più di me (2008, duets album) (ITA: 3× platinum)
  • Più di te (2009, duets album) (ITA: gold)
  • Meticci (Io mi fermo qui) (2013)
  • Un pugno di stelle (2018)
  • Unica (2021)

Filmography

Films
Year Title Role Notes
1959 Ragazzi del Juke-Box Barmaid Cameo appearance
1961 Duel of the Titans Tarpeia
1962 Invasion 1700 Woman Cameo appearance
1964 Amori pericolosi Prostitute Segment: "La Ronda"
I ragazzi dell'Hully Gully Singer Cameo appearance
1966 Per un pugno di canzoni Singer Cameo appearance
1971 Il mulino del Po La Sniza Television film
1979 I viaggiatori della sera Nicki
2015 What a Beautiful Surprise Carla
2021 7 Women and a Murder Rachele

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ornella Vanoni.

Much of the content of this article comes from the equivalent Italian-language Wikipedia article (retrieved 28 March 2006).

  1. ^ "Chi è Ornella Vanoni: Età, altezza, canzoni, figli, dove abita e quei ritocchi che l'hanno cambiata".
  2. ^ "Comparison page". WhoSampled.
  3. ^ "Vanoni-Paoli, la festa a Roma - la Repubblica.it".
  4. ^ Senza fine Vanoni, La Repubblica March 11, 2013
  5. ^ "Ocean's Twelve (2004) - IMDb". IMDb.
  6. ^ "Soundtracks of Cinema: 'Toscana' - vaguevisages.com".
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