Mia Martini

Mia Martini
Mia Martini in Venice in 1973, holding the Gondola d'Oro prize won with her song "Donna sola"
Mia Martini in Venice in 1973, holding the Gondola d'Oro prize won with her song "Donna sola"
Background information
Birth nameDomenica Rita Adriana Bertè
Also known asMimì Bertè
Born(1947-09-20)20 September 1947
Bagnara Calabra, Reggio Calabria, Italy
Died12 May 1995(1995-05-12) (aged 47)
Cardano al Campo, Varese, Italy
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Singer-songwriter
  • musician
Years active1963–1983
1989–1995

Domenica Rita Adriana Bertè (Italian pronunciation: [doˈmeːnika berˈtɛ]; 20 September 1947 – 12 May 1995), known professionally as Mia Martini (pronounced [ˈmiːa marˈtiːni]), was an Italian singer, songwriter and musician.[1][2] She is considered, by many experts,[3][4] one of the most important and expressive female voices of Italian music, characterised by her interpretative intensity and her soulful performance.

Her debut album, Oltre la collina with the song "Padre davvero" is regarded as one of the best Italian albums made by a female artist.[5] Hit songs like "Piccolo uomo", "Donna sola", "Minuetto", "Inno", "Al mondo", "Che vuoi che sia se t'ho aspettato tanto", "Per amarti" and "La costruzione di un amore" made her one of the most popular artists of Italian music in the 1970s, both nationally and internationally. She is the only female artist to have won two Festivalbar consecutively, respectively in 1972 and in 1973.[6][7][8]

In 1977, two important encounters occurred in Martini's life: the first with Charles Aznavour, with whom she began a musical collaboration, and the second with singer-songwriter Ivano Fossati, with whom she started an artistic and sentimental partnership.

She returned to the music scene in 1981, after she underwent two vocal-cord surgeries that changed her vocal timbre and extension.

In 1982, she sang "E non finisce mica il cielo", written by Fossati, at Sanremo Music Festival, where she received the Critics Award, which was created specifically for her interpretation and which was named after her as "Mia Martini" Critics Awards from 1996, the year after her death.

In 1983, she was forced to leave the music industry and quit her career, as the music sector and colleagues considered her a person bringing bad luck and barred her from participating in any music and TV events, radio shows and concerts. This kept her away from the music scene for seven years. Only in 1989 was she able to reprise her career, when she returned to perform at Sanremo Music Festival, singing "Almeno tu nell'universo", which brought her a new success.

Martini's later hits included "Gli uomini non cambiano", "La nevicata del '56" and "Cu' mme", the latter with Roberto Murolo. She represented Italy at the Eurovision Song Contest twice, in 1977 with the song Libera and in 1992 with the song Rapsodia.

She died on 12 May 1995 in Cardano al Campo at the age of 47.

  1. ^ James Christopher Monger. Mia Martini. allmusic.com
  2. ^ Mia Martini. raiuno.rai.it. April 2000
  3. ^ Dario Salvatori, Dizionario delle canzoni italiane, Elle U Multimedia, 2001, pg. 31
  4. ^ Dizionario delle canzoni italiane, pg. 226
  5. ^ "I miti musica" n. 18, "Mia Martini", Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, 1999
  6. ^ Mia Martini: storia di una voce Archived 14 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine - Puntata de "La storia siamo noi" - Rai Educational
  7. ^ Maurizio Seymandi, 1975 settembre, Vota la voce, i lettori hanno scelto i più popolari dell'anno, TV Sorrisi e Canzoni, 38, 15, https://web.archive.org/web/20081221084327/http://www.sorrisi.com/sorrisi/upload/miamartini/miamartini1975_38.pdf
  8. ^ Cucco Paolo, 1977, Mia Martini. Libera felice e sconfitta, TV Sorrisi e Canzoni, 22, 71-72, https://web.archive.org/web/20081221084343/http://www.sorrisi.com/sorrisi/upload/miamartini/miamartini1977_22.pdf

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