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Francesco Guccini

 
Artist: Francesco Guccini

Followers:

  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Guccini Live Collection", "Stagioni", "Ritratti

Biography

Francesco Guccini is one of the most admired of the Italian cantautori of the 1970s, part of a generation that changed the face and principles of Italian popular music. Among peers such as Fabrizio de André, Francesco De Gregori, Lucio Dalla, or Paolo Conte, Guccini stands out for his fiercely uncompromising stance, which has translated into a career of remarkable aesthetic and ideological coherence. A poetic, if rather fatalistic, observer of life with a keen eye for the locale of the Italian provinces, Guccini's songs are tales of existential anguish over the passing of time and the regret over missed opportunities, lost causes, and friends. In the context of Italian culture, however, Guccini's persona is arguably as significant as his music. He has come to represent a lone, incorruptible moral force even to younger audiences and colleagues who do not necessarily or readily identify with the cantautori genre.

Born on June 14, 1940 -- four days after Italy entered World War Two -- Guccini spent the war years at his grandparents' house on the Apennines, and moved back to his native town of Modena in 1945. From that moment on, Guccini's life and work was indissolubly associated with the central region of Emilia Romagna, and particularly with his adopted hometown of Bologna, the city where his family relocated in 1961. The towns, landscape, language, and local characters of the Emilia Romagna region would feature extensively in Guccini's songs. It took a while for the young Francesco to find his calling, as he spent his twenties alternating between teaching jobs and university exams in the field of Literature, local journalism, a stint in the army, and an ongoing interest in music that had started in his teens. After teaching himself to strum the guitar and play the harmonica, he formed his first band, the Hurricanes (later rechristened the Snakes) at 17, and immediately began to write songs. During the '60s he performed solo or collaborated with a number of local acts (I Marinos, I Gatti, Equipe 84), and slowly but steadily built a reputation as a songwriter, heavily influenced by the protest folksingers of the time. The early Bob Dylan was the obvious referent, but equally important to Guccini's development were the Italian traditional songs from the workers' and anarchists' movements. In 1967, one of his own compositions, the controversial "Dio è Morto," was recorded by I Nomadi (who would jumpstart their career by singing Guccini's songs, not unlike the Byrds with Dylan's). The song caused quite a stir, as it was banned by the Italian Broadcasting Network RAI but praised by the Vatican. It also brought Guccini some much-needed attention and landed him a recording contract with EMI. He would stay with the company for his entire career, the longest association EMI has had with an Italian artist in history. Guccini's first album, Folk Beat No. 1, was released in 1967 and it went largely unnoticed, even if it contained some of what would eventually become Guccini's most famous songs, such as "Auschwitz" and "In Morte di S.F." (better known as "Canzone per una Amica"). In retrospect, Guccini's debut album offered a blueprint for his entire career, introducing his endearing, thick-accented drawl, and showing off his amazing talents as a writer equally comfortable in the registers of historical analysis, political or social satire, and personal introspection. Due Anni Dopo, a second, equally strong collection, followed in early 1970. In that same year he visited the United States, a long-cherished dream that soon turned sour. As many Italians of his generation did, Guccini nurtured a profound admiration for American culture (he taught English literature at Dickinson College in Bologna for 20 years), and he was shocked to realize how deeply Puritanical and unintellectual American society could be, worlds away from the liberality and modernity he had imagined from its music and literature. Upon his return, his songs started to turn away from American protest folk music, becoming more literate and long-winded -- not to mention even more taciturn and pessimistic. Key to these changes was the introduction of arranger and keyboard player Vince Tempera, bassist Ares Tavolazzi, and drummer Ellade Bandini for Guccini's third album, L'Isola non Trovata, released in late 1970. These musicians, among Italy's foremost session players, would become Guccini's studio and tour band for virtually his entire career and substantially influence his moving away from the traditional format of three-minute verse/chorus folk songs to six-or-more-minutes-long narrative pieces set to an understated jazzy background, with piano taking over the acoustic guitar as the dominant voice. 1972 saw the release of Radici, Guccini's breakthrough album that all but secured his entrance in the pantheon of Italy's most beloved cantautori. The album also included his signature song "La Locomotiva," based on the real story of an anarchist who stole a train engine in 1893, and drove it at full speed into Bologna's main station, crashing it. The song went on to became a symbol of the Italian left, and forever cast in stone Guccini's reputation as a "political" songwriter -- a judgment that even a cursory examination of Guccini's work would expose at best as highly restrictive, if not misleading.

Guccini's first four albums are all seminal masterpieces of Italian folk-rock and constitute essential listening for anyone interested in modern Italian culture. They also featured the bulk of Guccini's greatest songs, with classics such as "Vedi Cara," "L'Isola non Trovata," "Un Altro Giorno è Andato," "Il Vecchio ed il Bambino," or "Incontro" (plus the songs already mentioned above), all to become staples of his superb live repertoire. Guccini's subsequent albums were overall more consistent than brilliant, but for all of their customary seriousness of design and execution, tended to include fewer memorable songs -- roughly one classic per album. The one notable exception was 1976's Via Paolo Fabbri 43, that added the legendary rant "L'Avvelenata," as well as the moving "Canzoni Quasi d'Amore" and "Il Pensionato" to the canon of Guccini's finest. The tango-influenced Signora Bovary from 1987 was an elegant return to form, continued in 1990 with the much praised Quello Che Non.... While Guccini's records were no longer considered as indispensable as they had been in the '80s, they were still typically well-received, in both commercial and critical terms. However, it was his ever-popular concerts and live albums, such as the excellent Fra la Via Emilia e il West(perhaps the best introduction to the artist), that truly kept him alive in the public imagination. His studio albums from the '90s and 2000s were few and virtually interchangeable, and denoted an intensification of Guccini's erudite prose, which gained him considerable literary recognition and awards. In 1989 he published his first novel, the best-seller Croniche Epifaniche, and has since divided his time between literature and music, writing several novels and short stories (including a series of popular crime thrillers with Loriano Macchiavelli) as well as a dictionary of the Pavana region dialect. In addition, in the first decade of the 21st century, the 60-year old Guccini took to appearing in films -- ostensibly just for the fun of it -- most notably in fellow singer and friend Luciano Ligabue's directorial debut Radiofreccia, and in two of Leonardo Pieraccioni's blockbusters. ~ Mariano Prunes, All Music Guide
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Francesco Guccini.

Francesco Guccini (born June 14, 1940) is an Italian singer-songwriter and author. His songs are renowned for their poetic and literary value, and in 1990 he won the Premio Eugenio Montale for verses in music.

Contents

Biography

Guccini was born in Modena.

As recalled by a verse of one of his songs, "it was fate that in three months" moved his family out of Modena because of World War II. Guccini spent his childhood and part of his youth at his grandparents' place in a small village in the Apennine Mountains called Pàvana in the province of Pistoia, (Toscana). The memory of the years of his youth spent in the somewhat archaic society of the mountains of central Italy was to be ever-present in his songs and books.

He then moved back to his family in Modena and attended the local "istituto magistrale". He worked for a couple of years as a reporter for a local newspaper, the Gazzetta di Modena. In 1960 the Guccinis moved to Bologna where Guccini studied at the local university. From 1965 to 1985 he taught Italian at Dickinson College (an American school) in Bologna.

He played in local bands such as The Hurricanes and Gatti and achieved success in the 1960s writing songs for an Italian band, Nomadi, also from Modena. Some of these successes include "Noi non ci saremo" ("We won't be there") and "Dio è morto" ("God is dead"). In the 1970s, Nomadi recorded two albums of Guccini's songs as well as a live album, Album Concerto, featuring him. Guccini's debut album was Folk beat n. 1 (1967).

Guccini has always said that his first two works, Folk beat n. 1 and Due anni dopo ("Two years later"), were essays or experiements, which is noticeable in the quite spare accompaniment to many of the songs on these albums. The latter, however, contained classics like the title-track and "La primavera di Praga" ("Prague Spring"). His first mature album is L'Isola non trovata ("The Undiscovered Island") of 1970, which displays many of the themes which were to be present in future releases: for example, a certain melancholy because of the perceived nearness of death. Also characteristic are the portraits of outcasts like "Il frate" ("The Friar").

Radici ("Roots", 1972), is one of Guccini's finest works, and contains some of his most famous songs. These include: the title-track, a nostalgic declaration of love for Guccini's youth spent in the Apennine mountains; "La locomotiva" ("The Locomotive"), a long ballad about the solitary, unlucky revolt of a Bolognese railwayman during the 19th century; and "Piccola città" ("Small City"), about Guccini's early years in provincial Modena.

Stanze di vita quotidiana ("Rooms of Everyday Life") of 1974 deals with more private themes, sometimes with an accents of desperation. The album contains at least one masterpiece, the nostalgic "Canzone delle osterie di fuori porta" ("Song of the Taverns on the outskirts of town").

In 1976 Guccini scored his greatest commercial success with the album Via Paolo Fabbri 43. The title is the street where he still lives in Bologna. The album features the famous "L'avvelenata" ("The Poisoned one"), in which Guccini unleashes his rage against his critics.

Guccini on stage.

Amerigo (1978), whose title-track is about the story of the emigration of Guccini's uncle to the United States, Metropolis (1981), and Guccini (1983), showed that the Bolognese singer's inspiration was left untouched by the general change to more commercial themes that characterized the Italian musical world from the end of 1970s.

The 1984 live tour was highly successful, and was soon collected in a double live LP, Fra la Via Emilia e il West ("Between the Via Emilia and the West"). Emilia Romagna and the Old West symbolize well the double ties of Guccini to his native land and to America. Guccini has said that he encountered the latter early on in life through the comics and magazines imported by US soldiers during World War II, but also through his uncle's stories. After the war, like many Italians of the period, he was of course influenced by American songs and Hollywood movies, and finally travelled to America, even enjoying an affair with an American.

His last album in the 1980s was Signora Bovary (1987), containing notable pieces like "Scirocco". After several undistinguished albums in the 1990s, Guccini returned at his best with Stagioni ("Seasons") of 2000: the title-track is a jeremiad against media invasiveness and the moral corruption of Italy.

Guccini's last studio release, Ritratti, was published in 2004.

Other activities

In the 1970s Guccini made appearances in some bizarre TV shows: in one of them he worked with the then unknown comedian Roberto Benigni. Occasionally, he also worked as an actor in some movies, the most successful being Radiofreccia by the other Emilian singer and songwriter Luciano Ligabue (1998). The collaborations between the two songwriters extended of course to some songs, one of them present in Guccini's album Stagioni. Guccini also wrote the soundtracks for the movies Nenè by Salvatore Samperi (1977) and Nero by Giancarlo Soldi (1992).

Recently, Guccini has distinguished himself as a writer, publishing some books about his youth in Pàvana and, in collaboration with Loriano Macchiavelli, four mystery books also set in that city and pivoting around the figure of a Carabinieri officer. He has also published a dictionary of the "pavanese" dialect, and told of his youth in the novels Vacca d'un cane and Croniche epafániche.

One of his lesser known activities is as a comics writer. His main productions in this field are the Storie dello spazio profondo ("Deep Space Stories"): it a series of short, humoristic science fiction stories created from 1972 together with his Bolognese friend, the cartoonist Franco Bonvicini.

Awards

He received several awards for his artistic work, among them the "Premio Tenco" in 1975 and the "Targhe Tenco" received in 1987 for the song "Scirocco", in 1994 for Parnassius Guccinii and in 2000 for "Ho ancora la forza", written together with Luciano Ligabue.

In 1992 he received the "Librex-Guggenheim" award and in 2003 the municipality of Carpi (in the Modena province) organized an exhibition on his works.

Trivia

  • In the first ballot of the 2006 Italian presidential election, held on 8 May, Guccini received one vote.
  • He is known for usually bringing a bottle of wine on stage during his concerts. Every concert begins with "Canzone per un'Amica" and ends with "La Locomotiva"; Guccini hardly ever gives encores.
  • The Parnassius guccinii butterfly species, first identified in 1992 in the Apennine mountains, is named after him. It was later the title of one of his albums.
  • He is the most famous supporter of the football team A.C. Pistoiese.
  • Luciano Tesi and Gabriele Cattani named asteroid 39748 Guccini after Francesco Guccini.
  • "Auschwitz" also called "Il Bambino Nel Vento," was recorded and released in translation by American singer-songwriter Rod MacDonald in 1994 on his CD The Man On The Ledge (Shanachie Records/USA)...the version as translated was heard and approved by Guccini himself, who observed "it captures the original intent of my song better than the hit version"...to read the translated lyrics, go to [1].

Discography

Bibliography

  • Croniche epafániche (1991)
  • Vacca d'un cane (1993)
  • Storie d'inverno (1994, with Giorgio Celli and Valerio Manfredi)
  • Macaronì (1998, with Loriano Macchiavelli)
  • Un disco dei Platters (1999, with Loriano Macchiavelli)
  • Un altro giorno è andato - Francesco Guccini si racconta a Massimo Cotto (1998, by Massimo Cotto)
  • Questo sangue che impasta la terra (2001, with Loriano Macchiavelli)
  • Storia di altre storie (2001, with Vincenzo Cerami)
  • Lo spirito e altri briganti (2002, with Loriano Macchiavelli)
  • Cittanova blues (2003)
  • La legge del bar e altre comiche (2005)
  • Tango e gli altri, storia di una raffica anzi due (2007, with Loriano Macchiavelli)

Comics

  • Storie dello spazio profondo (1975, - with Bonvi)
  • Poche ore all'alba (1975, with Magnus)
  • Vita e morte del brigante Bobino detto Gnicche (1980, with F. Rubino)
  • Barbùn vs. Realtà (1981, with F. Scozzari)
  • Gerry Pompa

Movies

  • Bologna. Fantasia, ma non troppo, per violino (1976, actor)
  • Nenè (1977, sound track)
  • I giorni cantati (1979, actor and sound track)
  • Musica per vecchi animali (1989, actor)
  • Nero (1992, sound track)
  • Radiofreccia (1998, actor)
  • Ormai è fatta (1999, actor)
  • Ti amo in tutte le lingue del mondo (2006, actor)
  • Una moglie bellissima (2007, actor)

External links


 
 
Learn More
Radio Freccia (1998 Drama Film)
Cisco (World Artist, '90s, 2000s)
Secondo Tempo: Greatest Hits 96-05 [CD/DVD] (2008 Album by Ligabue)

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