Paolo Conte
Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox musical artist
Paolo Conte (Template:IPA; born 6 January 1937) is an Italian singer, pianist, songwriter and lawyer, known for his distinctly grainy, resonant voice. His compositions fuse Italian and Mediterranean sounds with jazz, boogie and elements of the French Template:Lang and Latin-American rhythms.
Career
Conte was born in Asti, Piedmont. His parents were avid jazz fans, and Conte and his brothers Giorgio and Paolo spent their formative years listening to a lot of early jazz and blues recordings.<ref name=curcio>Cotto, Massimo (1990). "Conte, Paolo". Castaldo, Gino (edited by). Dizionario della canzone italiana. Curcio Editore. pp. 430-2.</ref> After obtaining a law degree at the University of Parma, Conte started working as an assistant solicitor with his father, simultaneously pursuing his musical studies. He learned to play the trombone, the vibraphone and the piano,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and after being part of several local bands formed a jazz ensamble with his brother on drums, the Paul Conte Quartet, with whom he made his record debut with the EP The Italian Way To Swing.<ref name="curcio" /><ref name="enc">Template:Cite book</ref> In 1964, Paolo and Giorgio Conte were put under contract by Clan Celentano, and Paolo Conte made his official debut as composer with Vanna Brosio's "Ed ora te ne vai".<ref name="enc" /> In the following years, often paired with lyricist Vito Pallavicini, Conte penned hit songs for Adriano Celentano ("Siamo la coppia più bella del mondo", 1967, and "Azzurro", 1968), Caterina Caselli ("Insieme a te non ci sto più", 1968), Fausto Leali ("Deborah", 1968) and Enzo Jannacci ("Messico e nuvole", 1970).<ref name="curcio" /><ref name="enc" />
In 1974, at his producer Lilli Greco’s insistence, Conte recorded his first album, Paolo Conte, containing his classic "Onda su onda".<ref name="curcio" /> The following year, he released another eponymous album, which included the classics "Genova per noi", "La topolino amaranto", and "La ricostruzione del Mocambo".<ref name="curcio" /> In 1976, Conte held his first solo concerts at Club Tenco in Sanremo and at Teatro Laboratorio in Verona.<ref name="curcio" /> In 1979, he released his third album, Un gelato al limon, produced by Claudio Fabi and featuring two of his better known songs, "Bartali" and "Sudamerica".<ref name="curcio" /><ref name="enc" /> Together with its 1981 followup Paris Milonga, which included his signature song "Via con me", the album marked the breakout of Conte.<ref name="curcio" /><ref name="enc" /> In 1983, he moved from RCA Italiana to CGD and released a third eponymous album, which got him two Targa Tenco prizes for best album and best song ("Sotto le stelle del jazz"), and marked a more explicit embrace of jazz music.<ref name="curcio" /><ref name="enc" /> Following the release of the album, he held long European and North American tours, gaining particular success in France, where he performed at Olympia for six consecutive days of sold-out concerts.<ref name="curcio" /> In 1985, he released his first live album, Concerti, recorded between Théâtre de la Ville in Paris, Teatro Morlacchi in Perugia and Teatro alle Vigne in Lodi.<ref name="curcio" /><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1987, he released the double album Aguaplano, which again won the Targa Tenco for best album.<ref name="enc" />
In 1990, Conte released Parole d'amore scritte a macchina, in which for the first time he served as arranger.<ref name="enc" /> His following studio album, 900, released in 1992, was again awarded the Targa Tenco for best album.<ref name="enc" /> His 1996 collection The Best of Paolo Conte (released in the United States in 1998) was an international success.<ref name="enc" /> In 1997, Conte won the Nastro d'Argento for Best Score and the David di Donatello in the same category for Enzo D'Alò's film How the Toys Saved Christmas.<ref name="cinema" /> In 1999, he won the Targa Tenco for best song for "Roba di Amilcare", one of the four new songs included in the live album Tournée 2.<ref name="enc" />
In 2000, after working on it for about 30 years, Conte launched the musical comedy Razmataz, that originally featured 105 songs, and eventually in its stage renditions consisted of 28 songs; it premiered in London at Barbican Centre, and had its French premiere in Cannes on May 2001, with Annie Girardot serving as narrator.<ref name=jsn>Template:Cite book</ref> In 2004, he won the Targa Tenco for best song for Elegia, the title track of his new studio album.<ref name="enc" /><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> In 2008, for the first time in his career, Conte topped the Italian hit parade with the album Psiche, which was also awarded a Gold Disc.<ref name=jsn></ref>
Some of Conte's most popular songs have been used as film soundtracks, including "Come Di" in I Am David (2003) and Mickey Blue Eyes (1999), "Blue tangos" in Jean-Luc Godard's Nouvelle Vague (1990), "Via con me" in over 40 films including French Kiss (1995), Mostly Martha (2001) and Welcome to Collinwood (2002).<ref name=cinema>Template:Cite book</ref> In addition, Conte's song "L'orchestrina" is featured in the television series The New Pope (2020).<ref name="cinema" />
Awards
On 24 March 1999, Conte was awarded the Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic,<ref>Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic</ref> by President Giorgio Napolitano for his "outstanding cultural achievements". On 15 May 2001, France ordered Paolo Conte Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. In 2015, Conte was awarded the Premio Galileo for contemporary music in Padua.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Conte has also received several honorary doctorates, including one from the University of Macerata (1990).<ref>Carlo Moretti, "Il Cantautore in cattedra professore di leggerezza", La Repubblica, 10 April 2003, p. 48.</ref>
Discography
Studio albums
- Paolo Conte (1974)
- Paolo Conte (1975)
- Un gelato al limon (1979)
- Paris milonga (1981)
- Appunti di viaggio (1982)
- Paolo Conte (1984)
- Aguaplano (1987, double album - the Japanese and German releases were issued as two separate albums, the second titled Jimmy Ballando in 1989)
- Parole d'amore scritte a macchina (1990)
- 900 (1992)
- Una faccia in prestito (1995)
- Razmataz (2000)
- Elegia (2004)
- Psiche (2008)
- Nelson (2010)
- Snob (2014)
- Amazing Game (2016)
Live albums
- Concerti (1985)
- Paolo Conte Live (1988)
- Paolo Conte - Haris Alexiou (1990)
- Tournée (1993)
- Tournée 2 (1998)
- Paolo Conte Live Arena di Verona (2005)
- Live in Caracalla – 50 Years of Azzurro (2018)
- Paolo Conte Live at Veneria Reale (2021)
- Paolo Conte Alla Scala - Il Maestro È Nell'Anima (2023)
Greatest Hits albums
- Come Di (1986, French release)
- Collezione (1988)<ref>Musicmeter</ref>
- Boogie (1990)
- Wanda, stai seria con la faccia ma però (1992)
- The Best of Paolo Conte (1996)
- Reveries (2003)
- Wonderful (2006)
- Gong-oh (2011)
- The Platinum Collection (2014)
References
Further reading
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External links
Template:Portal bar Template:Nastro d'Argento Best Score Template:Authority control
- Pages with broken file links
- 1937 births
- Living people
- 20th-century Italian male singers
- 21st-century Italian male singers
- Italian male singer-songwriters
- 20th-century Italian singer-songwriters
- 21st-century Italian singer-songwriters
- Italian male jazz pianists
- People from Asti
- David di Donatello winners
- Nastro d'Argento winners
- 20th-century Italian pianists
- 21st-century Italian pianists
- 20th-century Italian male musicians
- 21st-century Italian male musicians
- Jazz vibraphonists
- Italian jazz musicians