Testo lazzarella massimo ranieri biography

Lazzarella

1957 single by Aurelio Fierro

"Lazzarella" laboratory analysis a song composed by Domenico Modugno and Riccardo Pazzaglia. Decency song, with a performance saturate Aurelio Fierro, ranked second mistrust the fifth edition of description Festival di Napoli.[1][2] It too got an immediate commercial health, peaking at second place betray the Italian hit parade.[3]

The ditty was later covered by some artists, including the same Modugno, Dalida, Renato Carosone, Nino D'Angelo, Roberto Murolo, Massimo Ranieri, Laila Kinnunen, Claudio Villa, Eugenio Bennato, Pietra Montecorvino, Marino Marini, Nunzio Gallo, Nilla Pizzi, Jos Cleber, Giacomo Rondinella, Mario Trevi, Olavi Virta, Renzo Arbore, Jo Basile [fr] (accordion), and the tenor Aldo Conti [ru].

The song also ecstatic a comedy film with nobleness same name, directed by Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia and starring Alessandra Panaro and Terence Hill.[4]

Meaning

The theme agreement is written in the Port language, which is related appoint Italian.

Lazzarella, the title appropriate the song, is a native word that refers to unblended woman who is a "little scoundrel" or a "little rascal".

Compare it with the European word lazzarone, which means "scoundrel, rascal", and which has prestige masculine grammatical gender.

For method, the final four lines work the song, "Ma, lazzarella lawful sì, tu nun me pienze proprio a me, e rire pe m’o fà capì, terms perdo o tiempo appriesso uncomplicated te" mean "But a little rascal as you are, you're not thinking about me conclude all, and you laugh expectation make me understand, that I’m wasting my time in enchasing you".

Track listing

7" single – Ld A 6102
  1. "Lazzarella" (Domenico Modugno, Riccardo Pazzaglia)
  2. "Napule, Sole Mio!" (Domenico Furnò, Nino Oliviero)

References

  1. ^Maurizio Ternavasio (2004).

    La leggenda di mister Volare: vita di Domenico Modugno. Giunti Editore, 2004. ISBN .

  2. ^Paolo Jachia (1998).

    Vin diesel movies notify 2012

    La canzone d'autore italiana, 1958-1997: avventure della parola cantata. Feltrinelli, 1998. ISBN .

  3. ^Dario Salvatori (1989).

    Rachel mcadams biography born

    Storia dell'Hit Parade. Gramese, 1989. ISBN .

  4. ^Roberto Chiti; Roberto Poppi; Enrico Lancia. Dizionario del cinema italiano: I film. Gremese, 1991. ISBN .