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Luigi Tenco

Luigi Tenco (21 March 1938 – 27 January 1967) was an Italian singer-songwriter.

Luigi Tenco
Luigi Tenco in 1967
Background information
Also known as
  • Gordon Cliff
  • Dick Ventuno
  • Charles Aznavour Jr.
  • Gigi Mai
Born(1938-03-21)21 March 1938
Cassine, Kingdom of Italy
OriginGenoa, Italy
Died27 January 1967(1967-01-27) (aged 28)
Sanremo, Imperia, Italy
Genres
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
  • Guitar
  • Piano
  • Clarinet
  • Saxophone
Years active1953–1967
Labels

Biography

Tenco was born in Cassine (province of Alessandria) in 1938, the son of Teresa Zoccola and Giuseppe Tenco. He never knew his father, who died in unclear circumstances. It has been rumored that Luigi Tenco was the fruit of the extramarital relationship of his mother and the sixteen-year-old son of the wealthy family for whom she worked at the time. He has been described as "a sort of Italian Charles Aznavour".

Tenco spent his childhood in Cassine and Ricaldone until 1948, when he moved to Liguria, first to Nervi and then to Genoa, where his mother had a wine shop called Enos in the quarter of La Foce. During high school, Tenco founded the Jelly Roll Morton Boys Jazz band, in which Tenco played the clarinet and another singer, later to become famous, Bruno Lauzi, the banjo. Gino Paoli, who would become one of Italy's most famous singers and songwriters as well, also played with Tenco in the band he was later involved in, I Diavoli del Rock (The Rock Devils).

Tenco made his debut in the world of Italian professional music with the band I Cavalieri (The Knights), which included Giampiero Reverberi and Enzo Jannacci amongst others. During this period he used the pseudonym Gigi Mai. In 1961 Tenco released his first single under his real name, entitled Quando ("When").

He started university studying electronic engineering, trying to comply with the wish of his mother and brother. He twice failed the Analytic and Projective Geometry exam (a course he took with professor Eugenio Giuseppe Togliatti, the elder brother of the leader of the communist party Palmiro Togliatti). Later he was enrolled in political science, where he only gave two exams.

Tenco was interested in cinema and videomaking. In 1962 he began a short-lived cinematic experience, with Luciano Salce's movie La Cuccagna. He also collaborated on the soundtrack of the film, and introduced his friend Fabrizio De André (unknown at the time) through the song La ballata dell'eroe (Ballad for a hero).[1] Director Luigi Comencini considered Tenco for the role of Bube in his film La ragazza di Bube, based on Carlo Cassola's novel. He ultimately chose George Chakiris, the West Side Story star, instead. During this period Tenco formed a strong friendship with the Genoese anarchist poet Riccardo Mannerini. In 1963, however, his friendship with Gino Paoli broke up, due to a troubled relationship with the actress Stefania Sandrelli.

Tenco's first LP, Ballate e Canzoni, was released in 1962. One of the songs, "Cara Maestra" ("Dear Teacher"), was censored by the then-thriving Italian media censorship. The censors struck again in the following year, against his songs "Io sì" ("I Would"), considered too sexually explicit, and "Una brava ragazza" ("A Good Girl"), where Tenco express his admiration for a '60s "bad girl". In September 1964, he released "Ho capito che ti amo", a song written by him with musical arrangement by Ezio Leoni. It was released on the Italian record label Jolly as Side A of a 45 rpm, side B being "Io lo so già".[2] In Argentina, "Ho capito che ti amo" was the soundtrack of the popular soap opera El amor tiene cara de mujer.

In 1966, enduring a period of compulsory military service, he released "Un giorno dopo l'altro" (One Day after Another) for RCA. The military service did not stop him from traveling to Argentina together with Gianfranco Reverberi to meet the fans of El amor tiene cara de mujer. How he managed to arrive in Argentina while his passport was still in possession of the Italian Army is unknown. Moreover, under the military service one was not allowed to leave Italy and the punishment was detention, which he did not experience according to his service record book.[3]

In Rome during the same year, he met and befriended the Italian-French singer Dalida. The two were soon to become lovers.

1967 Sanremo Festival and death

In 1967, Tenco took part in the Italian Song Festival in Sanremo. It was rumoured that he participated against his will. He performed the song "Ciao amore, ciao" ("Bye, Bye my Love") with Dalida. The video of the performance is lost; however, the audio track, recorded from radio, survives.[4]

In the early morning hours of 27 January 1967, Tenco was found dead in his room at the Hotel Savoy by his singing partner Dalida. Tenco died from a single gunshot wound to the head. His death was ultimately ruled a suicide.[5][6] Tenco was apparently upset after learning that his song had been eliminated from the final competition.[6] His suicide note read: "I cared for the Italian public and I dedicated in vain five years of my life to them. I'm doing this not because I'm tired of life (I'm not) but as a gesture of dissent against the public who chose Io tu e le rose for the final night and against the commission that selected La rivoluzione. I hope this will clear somebody's head."

Tenco was buried in Ricaldone. In 1974, the Tenco Award was instituted, and has been held every year since in Sanremo. Many of the most renowned Italian singer-songwriters from the 1970s explicitly declared the influence of Tenco on their work. Francesco De Gregori's album Bufalo Bill of 1976 contained a song, "Festival", about Tenco's suicide; it points out the hypocrisy with which the music establishment tried to minimize the dramatic event, to let the show go on.

The inquiry

In 2004, on TV program Domenica in, the detective who followed the inquiry, commissario Arrigo Molinari, when asked by host Paolo Bonolis, stated that he was sure that Tenco did not commit suicide and he defined his death: "a collective murder".[7] He also justified his own faults concerning the Tenco inquiry by declaring that he had been prevented from investigating properly. Shortly after the quoted interview, Molinari died, killed by a thief.

In 2005, the French television channel TV5 carried a full-length dramatisation of the love affair of Tenco and Dalida. Tenco was played by Alessandro Gassman, while Dalida was played by Sabrina Ferilli. Notwithstanding the account of Tenco and Dalida's love story on which the dramatisation is based, at the beginning of the '90s Tenco's older brother Valentino met a woman, Valeria, who had in her possession several letters written by Tenco himself that would testify their love relationship started in 1964 and lasted until his death. In one of these letters, Tenco writes that his relationship with Dalida was nothing but a clumsy attempt to forget Valeria, who, months before, had left him. He describes Dalida as a woman: "spoiled, neurotic, ignorant, who rejects the idea of being defeated in her profession as in private life".[8] Valentino Tenco identified those letters as written by his brother.

The Italian judicial system later began re-examining Luigi Tenco's suicide. It was pointed out that the bullet hole was on the left temple, while the singer was right-handed. It had also been revealed that no autopsy had been done on the singer's corpse, no paraffine test, and no calligraphic analysis on the suicide note with which he explained his final gesture.

On 15 February 2006, Italian police exhumed Tenco's body for further investigation.[9] The next day, results from the new autopsy and ballistics analysis were reported. According to Italian experts, what had been thought to be the entry hole on the left temple was actually the exit site. The bullet trajectory was said to be compatible with suicide.[10]

Nevertheless, criminologists Pasquale Ragone and Nicola Guarneri, in their book Le ombre del silenzio (The shadows of silence, 2013)[8] pointed out several incongruences between the shell casing of the bullet found in Tenco's room and the bullet Tenco's Walther PPK gun would eject. Professor of ballistic forensics Martino Farneti proved that they did not match. There was no proof nor official statement declaring that Tenco's Walther PPK was actually present in his room the night he died (the police registers show that the gun was actually found in his car), so Guarneri and Ragone think that Tenco might have been killed. The actual weapon might have been a Beretta 70, as it is possible to put a silencer on this type of gun (similar to a Walther PPK). In fact, the night Tenco died (allegedly in his hotel room), no one heard the sound of the gunshot, not even singer Lucio Dalla, whose room was next to Tenco's, nor did journalist Sandro Ciotti, whose room was in front of Tenco's.

Music producer and friend Paolo Dossena stated that he drove Tenco's car from Rome (where the songwriter lived) to Sanremo and on the way, passing through a roadblock on the Aurelia, he discovered that Tenco had his Walther PPK in the dashboard of his car. He later confronted the songwriter who confessed that he took a gun because someone in the past few weeks had tried to drop him down a steep road near Santa Margherita Ligure while he was driving.[11]

The first witnesses who entered the room did not even see the suicide note. It was journalist Piero Vivarelli who delivered the note to the police after having spent a few minutes in Dalida's room. Guarneri and Ragone assume that the alleged suicide note might in fact have been the last page of a document written by Tenco for a different aim.

French journalist and novelist Philippe Brunel wrote a fiction book, La nuit de San Remo, in which he dramatises the arduous search for truth about Tenco's death.

Tributes

Shortly after Tenco's death, his friend and songwriter Fabrizio De André wrote for him the song Preghiera in gennaio (A prayer in January), where he describes a benevolent God welcoming those who committed suicide into Heaven, in spite of the moral condemnation of the bigots.

In 1999, the play Solitudini – Luigi Tenco e Dalida, written and directed by Maurizio Valtieri, was performed in Rome.

Discography

Albums

  • 1962: Luigi Tenco
  • 1965: Luigi Tenco
  • 1966: Tenco
Compilations / Unreleased materials
  • 1972: Luigi Tenco
  • 1972: Luigi Tenco canta Tenco, De André, Jannacci, Bob Dylan
  • 1977: Agli amici cantautori
  • 1984: Luigi Tenco

Extended plays

  • 1967: Ti ricorderai di me...
  • 1967: Se stasera sono qui
  • 1969: Pensaci un po'

Singles

  • 1959: "Mai"/"Giurami tu"
  • 1959: "Mi chiedi solo amore"/"Senza parole"
  • 1959: "Amore"/"Non so ancora" (as Gigi Mai)
  • 1959: "Vorrei sapere perché"/"Ieri" (as Gigi Mai)
  • 1960: "Tell Me That You Love Me"/"Love Is Here to Stay" (as Gordon Cliff)
  • 1960: "Quando"/"Sempre la stessa storia" (as Dick Ventuno)
  • 1961: "Il mio regno"/"I miei giorni perduti"
  • 1961: "Quando"/"Triste sera"
  • 1961: "Una vita inutile"/"Ti ricorderai"
  • 1961: "Ti ricorderai"/"Quando"
  • 1961: "Ti ricorderai"/"Se qualcuno ti dirà"
  • 1961: "Quando"/"Se qualcuno ti dirà"/"Ti ricorderai"/"I miei giorni perduti"
  • 1961: "Senza parole"/"In qualche parte del mondo"
  • 1962: "Come le altre"/"La mia geisha"
  • 1962: "In qualche parte del mondo"
  • 1962: "Quello che conta"/"Tra tanta gente"/"La ballata dell'eroe"
  • 1962: "Angela"/"Mi sono innamorato di te"
  • 1962: "Quando"/"Il mio regno"
  • 1963: "Io sì"/"Una brava ragazza"
  • 1964: "Ragazzo mio"/"No, non è vero"
  • 1964: "Ho capito che ti amo"/"Io lo so già"
  • 1965: "Tu non hai capito niente"/"Non sono io"
  • 1966: "Se sapessi come fai"/"Un giorno dopo l'altro"
  • 1966: "Lontano lontano"/"Ognuno è libero"
  • 1967: "Ciao amore, ciao"/"E se ci diranno"
  • 1967: "Quando"/"Mi sono innamorato di te"
  • 1967: "Ti ricorderai"/"Angela"
  • 1967: "Guarda se io"/"Vedrai vedrai"
  • 1967: "Io vorrei essere là"/"Io sono uno"
  • 1967: "Se stasera sono qui"/"Cara maestra"
  • 1968: "Pensaci un po'"/"Il tempo dei limoni"
  • 1970: "Vedrai vedrai"/"Ah... l'amore l'amore"
  • 1984: "Serenella"

See also

References

  1. ^ Tenco, Luigi. "Luigi Tenco – La ballata dell'eroe". Archived from the original on 13 December 2021.
  2. ^ Discografia Nazionale della Canzone Italiana – HO CAPITO CHE TI AMO/IO LO SO GIÀ
  3. ^ Guarneri Ragone (2013). Le ombre del silenzio. Castelvecchi.
  4. ^ Tenco, Luigi. . Archived from the original on 30 July 2011.
  5. ^ Campion, Chris (23 January 2008). "Unsung Heroes No.4 – Luigi Tenco". Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  6. ^ a b "Festival Loser Kills Himself". The New York Times. 28 January 1967. Retrieved 22 April 2009.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 November 2014.
  8. ^ a b Guarneri, Ragone (2013). Le ombre del silenzio. Castelvecchi.
  9. ^ "Tenco: confermata l'ipotesi del suicidio." 16 February 2006. Retrieved on 1 March 2009. Il Corriere della Sera (Google's automated translation)
  10. ^ "Unsung Heroes No.4 – Luigi Tenco". Retrieved 23 June 2015.
  11. ^ "Testimonianza di Paolo Dossena". Archived from the original on 13 December 2021.

External links

  • Luigi Tenco at Find a Grave
  • Luigi Tenco article on Cult Cargo

luigi, tenco, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, italian, october, 2020, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, point, translations,. This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Italian October 2020 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 2 717 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Italian Wikipedia article at it Luigi Tenco see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated it Luigi Tenco to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Luigi Tenco news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Luigi Tenco 21 March 1938 27 January 1967 was an Italian singer songwriter Luigi TencoLuigi Tenco in 1967Background informationAlso known asGordon CliffDick VentunoCharles Aznavour Jr Gigi MaiBorn 1938 03 21 21 March 1938Cassine Kingdom of ItalyOriginGenoa ItalyDied27 January 1967 1967 01 27 aged 28 Sanremo Imperia ItalyGenresFolkPopOccupation s Singer songwriterInstrument s VocalsGuitarPianoClarinetSaxophoneYears active1953 1967LabelsRicordi Jolly RCA Joker it Philips Contents 1 Biography 2 1967 Sanremo Festival and death 2 1 The inquiry 3 Tributes 4 Discography 4 1 Albums 4 2 Extended plays 4 3 Singles 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditTenco was born in Cassine province of Alessandria in 1938 the son of Teresa Zoccola and Giuseppe Tenco He never knew his father who died in unclear circumstances It has been rumored that Luigi Tenco was the fruit of the extramarital relationship of his mother and the sixteen year old son of the wealthy family for whom she worked at the time He has been described as a sort of Italian Charles Aznavour Tenco spent his childhood in Cassine and Ricaldone until 1948 when he moved to Liguria first to Nervi and then to Genoa where his mother had a wine shop called Enos in the quarter of La Foce During high school Tenco founded the Jelly Roll Morton Boys Jazz band in which Tenco played the clarinet and another singer later to become famous Bruno Lauzi the banjo Gino Paoli who would become one of Italy s most famous singers and songwriters as well also played with Tenco in the band he was later involved in I Diavoli del Rock The Rock Devils Tenco made his debut in the world of Italian professional music with the band I Cavalieri The Knights which included Giampiero Reverberi and Enzo Jannacci amongst others During this period he used the pseudonym Gigi Mai In 1961 Tenco released his first single under his real name entitled Quando When He started university studying electronic engineering trying to comply with the wish of his mother and brother He twice failed the Analytic and Projective Geometry exam a course he took with professor Eugenio Giuseppe Togliatti the elder brother of the leader of the communist party Palmiro Togliatti Later he was enrolled in political science where he only gave two exams Tenco was interested in cinema and videomaking In 1962 he began a short lived cinematic experience with Luciano Salce s movie La Cuccagna He also collaborated on the soundtrack of the film and introduced his friend Fabrizio De Andre unknown at the time through the song La ballata dell eroe Ballad for a hero 1 Director Luigi Comencini considered Tenco for the role of Bube in his film La ragazza di Bube based on Carlo Cassola s novel He ultimately chose George Chakiris the West Side Story star instead During this period Tenco formed a strong friendship with the Genoese anarchist poet Riccardo Mannerini In 1963 however his friendship with Gino Paoli broke up due to a troubled relationship with the actress Stefania Sandrelli Tenco s first LP Ballate e Canzoni was released in 1962 One of the songs Cara Maestra Dear Teacher was censored by the then thriving Italian media censorship The censors struck again in the following year against his songs Io si I Would considered too sexually explicit and Una brava ragazza A Good Girl where Tenco express his admiration for a 60s bad girl In September 1964 he released Ho capito che ti amo a song written by him with musical arrangement by Ezio Leoni It was released on the Italian record label Jolly as Side A of a 45 rpm side B being Io lo so gia 2 In Argentina Ho capito che ti amo was the soundtrack of the popular soap opera El amor tiene cara de mujer In 1966 enduring a period of compulsory military service he released Un giorno dopo l altro One Day after Another for RCA The military service did not stop him from traveling to Argentina together with Gianfranco Reverberi to meet the fans of El amor tiene cara de mujer How he managed to arrive in Argentina while his passport was still in possession of the Italian Army is unknown Moreover under the military service one was not allowed to leave Italy and the punishment was detention which he did not experience according to his service record book 3 In Rome during the same year he met and befriended the Italian French singer Dalida The two were soon to become lovers 1967 Sanremo Festival and death EditIn 1967 Tenco took part in the Italian Song Festival in Sanremo It was rumoured that he participated against his will He performed the song Ciao amore ciao Bye Bye my Love with Dalida The video of the performance is lost however the audio track recorded from radio survives 4 In the early morning hours of 27 January 1967 Tenco was found dead in his room at the Hotel Savoy by his singing partner Dalida Tenco died from a single gunshot wound to the head His death was ultimately ruled a suicide 5 6 Tenco was apparently upset after learning that his song had been eliminated from the final competition 6 His suicide note read I cared for the Italian public and I dedicated in vain five years of my life to them I m doing this not because I m tired of life I m not but as a gesture of dissent against the public who chose Io tu e le rose for the final night and against the commission that selected La rivoluzione I hope this will clear somebody s head Tenco was buried in Ricaldone In 1974 the Tenco Award was instituted and has been held every year since in Sanremo Many of the most renowned Italian singer songwriters from the 1970s explicitly declared the influence of Tenco on their work Francesco De Gregori s album Bufalo Bill of 1976 contained a song Festival about Tenco s suicide it points out the hypocrisy with which the music establishment tried to minimize the dramatic event to let the show go on The inquiry Edit In 2004 on TV program Domenica in the detective who followed the inquiry commissario Arrigo Molinari when asked by host Paolo Bonolis stated that he was sure that Tenco did not commit suicide and he defined his death a collective murder 7 He also justified his own faults concerning the Tenco inquiry by declaring that he had been prevented from investigating properly Shortly after the quoted interview Molinari died killed by a thief In 2005 the French television channel TV5 carried a full length dramatisation of the love affair of Tenco and Dalida Tenco was played by Alessandro Gassman while Dalida was played by Sabrina Ferilli Notwithstanding the account of Tenco and Dalida s love story on which the dramatisation is based at the beginning of the 90s Tenco s older brother Valentino met a woman Valeria who had in her possession several letters written by Tenco himself that would testify their love relationship started in 1964 and lasted until his death In one of these letters Tenco writes that his relationship with Dalida was nothing but a clumsy attempt to forget Valeria who months before had left him He describes Dalida as a woman spoiled neurotic ignorant who rejects the idea of being defeated in her profession as in private life 8 Valentino Tenco identified those letters as written by his brother The Italian judicial system later began re examining Luigi Tenco s suicide It was pointed out that the bullet hole was on the left temple while the singer was right handed It had also been revealed that no autopsy had been done on the singer s corpse no paraffine test and no calligraphic analysis on the suicide note with which he explained his final gesture On 15 February 2006 Italian police exhumed Tenco s body for further investigation 9 The next day results from the new autopsy and ballistics analysis were reported According to Italian experts what had been thought to be the entry hole on the left temple was actually the exit site The bullet trajectory was said to be compatible with suicide 10 Nevertheless criminologists Pasquale Ragone and Nicola Guarneri in their book Le ombre del silenzio The shadows of silence 2013 8 pointed out several incongruences between the shell casing of the bullet found in Tenco s room and the bullet Tenco s Walther PPK gun would eject Professor of ballistic forensics Martino Farneti proved that they did not match There was no proof nor official statement declaring that Tenco s Walther PPK was actually present in his room the night he died the police registers show that the gun was actually found in his car so Guarneri and Ragone think that Tenco might have been killed The actual weapon might have been a Beretta 70 as it is possible to put a silencer on this type of gun similar to a Walther PPK In fact the night Tenco died allegedly in his hotel room no one heard the sound of the gunshot not even singer Lucio Dalla whose room was next to Tenco s nor did journalist Sandro Ciotti whose room was in front of Tenco s Music producer and friend Paolo Dossena stated that he drove Tenco s car from Rome where the songwriter lived to Sanremo and on the way passing through a roadblock on the Aurelia he discovered that Tenco had his Walther PPK in the dashboard of his car He later confronted the songwriter who confessed that he took a gun because someone in the past few weeks had tried to drop him down a steep road near Santa Margherita Ligure while he was driving 11 The first witnesses who entered the room did not even see the suicide note It was journalist Piero Vivarelli who delivered the note to the police after having spent a few minutes in Dalida s room Guarneri and Ragone assume that the alleged suicide note might in fact have been the last page of a document written by Tenco for a different aim French journalist and novelist Philippe Brunel wrote a fiction book La nuit de San Remo in which he dramatises the arduous search for truth about Tenco s death Tributes EditShortly after Tenco s death his friend and songwriter Fabrizio De Andre wrote for him the song Preghiera in gennaio A prayer in January where he describes a benevolent God welcoming those who committed suicide into Heaven in spite of the moral condemnation of the bigots In 1999 the play Solitudini Luigi Tenco e Dalida written and directed by Maurizio Valtieri was performed in Rome Discography EditAlbums Edit 1962 Luigi Tenco 1965 Luigi Tenco 1966 TencoCompilations Unreleased materials1972 Luigi Tenco 1972 Luigi Tenco canta Tenco De Andre Jannacci Bob Dylan 1977 Agli amici cantautori 1984 Luigi TencoExtended plays Edit 1967 Ti ricorderai di me 1967 Se stasera sono qui 1969 Pensaci un po Singles Edit 1959 Mai Giurami tu 1959 Mi chiedi solo amore Senza parole 1959 Amore Non so ancora as Gigi Mai 1959 Vorrei sapere perche Ieri as Gigi Mai 1960 Tell Me That You Love Me Love Is Here to Stay as Gordon Cliff 1960 Quando Sempre la stessa storia as Dick Ventuno 1961 Il mio regno I miei giorni perduti 1961 Quando Triste sera 1961 Una vita inutile Ti ricorderai 1961 Ti ricorderai Quando 1961 Ti ricorderai Se qualcuno ti dira 1961 Quando Se qualcuno ti dira Ti ricorderai I miei giorni perduti 1961 Senza parole In qualche parte del mondo 1962 Come le altre La mia geisha 1962 In qualche parte del mondo 1962 Quello che conta Tra tanta gente La ballata dell eroe 1962 Angela Mi sono innamorato di te 1962 Quando Il mio regno 1963 Io si Una brava ragazza 1964 Ragazzo mio No non e vero 1964 Ho capito che ti amo Io lo so gia 1965 Tu non hai capito niente Non sono io 1966 Se sapessi come fai Un giorno dopo l altro 1966 Lontano lontano Ognuno e libero 1967 Ciao amore ciao E se ci diranno 1967 Quando Mi sono innamorato di te 1967 Ti ricorderai Angela 1967 Guarda se io Vedrai vedrai 1967 Io vorrei essere la Io sono uno 1967 Se stasera sono qui Cara maestra 1968 Pensaci un po Il tempo dei limoni 1970 Vedrai vedrai Ah l amore l amore 1984 Serenella See also EditDalida Christian de la MaziereReferences Edit Tenco Luigi Luigi Tenco La ballata dell eroe Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 Discografia Nazionale della Canzone Italiana HO CAPITO CHE TI AMO IO LO SO GIA Guarneri Ragone 2013 Le ombre del silenzio Castelvecchi Tenco Luigi Ciao Amore Ciao live in Sanremo Archived from the original on 30 July 2011 Campion Chris 23 January 2008 Unsung Heroes No 4 Luigi Tenco Retrieved 1 September 2022 a b Festival Loser Kills Himself The New York Times 28 January 1967 Retrieved 22 April 2009 Intervista di Paolo Bonolis ad Arrigo Molinari Archived from the original on 5 November 2014 a b Guarneri Ragone 2013 Le ombre del silenzio Castelvecchi Tenco confermata l ipotesi del suicidio 16 February 2006 Retrieved on 1 March 2009 Il Corriere della Sera Google s automated translation Unsung Heroes No 4 Luigi Tenco Retrieved 23 June 2015 Testimonianza di Paolo Dossena Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Luigi Tenco Luigi Tenco 60 s La verde isola fatta di soli amici Luigi Tenco at Find a Grave Luigi Tenco article on Cult Cargo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Luigi Tenco amp oldid 1112182636, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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