Claudio Baglioni

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Claudio Baglioni
Claudio Baglioni in 1985.
Claudio Baglioni in 1985.
Background information
Born (1951-05-16) 16 May 1951 (age 70)
OriginRome, Italy
GenresPop, pop rock, adult contemporary music, Rock, World Music
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, composer, record producer, architect
Years active1968–present
LabelsRCA Italiana, CBS, Sony Music
WebsiteClaudio Baglioni official website
Height1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)

Claudio Baglioni (Italian pronunciation: [ˈklaudjo baʎˈʎoːni]; born 16 May 1951) is an Italian pop singer-songwriter and musician. His career has been going on for over 50 years.[1] Some songs from the 70s are part of Italian culture such as E tu come stai?. In the 80s he released the two best-selling albums ever in Italy Strada facendo and La vita è adesso. And in the 90's he embraced World Music with records like Oltre and Io sono qui. In 2006 he composed the anthem of the 2006 Winter Olympics.[2][3][4]

Biography[]

Around 1968 he composed the Annabel Lee musical suite, based on a poem by Edgar Allan Poe. In 1969 he released his first single and recorded the single Signora Lia; a comic song that tells of a lady's marital infidelity, over time the song will become a cult of Italian pop music despite its poor initial success.

Success came only in 1972 with the album Questo piccolo grande amore; the homonymous song in 1985 will be awarded as the Italian song of the century. In 1974 he recorded the album E tu ... with Vangelis. In 1975 it comes out Sabato pomeriggio; a concept album about waiting, based on Giacomo Leopardi's poems. In 1977 the album Solo; the first in which he makes lyrics, music and production on his own. In 1978 comes the incredible success with the album E tu come stai?.

Baglioni in the early 1980s

In 1981 he produced the hugely successful album Strada facendo; the first Italian album to reach one million copies sold. The following year the Alé-Oó tour starts, the first tour of an Italian singer in the big stadiums. The name of the tour in fact takes its cue from a typical chorus of football matches. In June of the same year (1982) Claudio at the age of 31 becomes a father and in one day writes the worldwide hit song Avrai dedicated to his son.

Claudio Baglioni in the mid-80s

In 1985 comes the incredible success of the album La vita è adesso, the best-selling album of all time in Italy, immediately after the release of the album begins the 1985 tour that totaled over 1.5 million spectators with the final concert in Rome which was the first concert in the history of Italian music to be broadcast live on TV, the overwhelming success of the albun kicks off another big tour the following year; Assolo a sensational tour consisting of over 30 concerts in the great stadiums of Italy where Claudio Baglioni performs completely alone, without a band, with the help of classical and electric guitar, pianola, piano, synthesizer and MIDI, a technology never tested at the time. The live album Assolo is based on the concert at the stadium in the city of Milan to which almost 100,000 people will flock, the triple album was a commercial success in Europe. The success of Claudio in this decade is so high that around the end of 1985 the first collection for the European market of the singer-songwriter was released, entitled Claudio Baglioni,[5] containing the best ten songs of the singer-songwriter of the 80s.

In 1988 he participated in a concert of the Human Right Now! tour with Peter Gabriel, Sting and Bruce Springsteen.

Claudio Baglioni in 90s

In 1990 after 3 years of work he released the double album Oltre, an ambitious project with 20 songs that embrace World Music and the participation of great international artists; the album will radically change the Italian music industry. The concert of 1991 will be decreed by Billboard magazine as the best concert of the year in the world, due to the stage that is located in the center of the stadium with the public surrounding it in the round. In the same year the European version of the record Oltre is marketed.[6] In 1995 the album Io sono qui was released, which marks Claudio's return to the scene, the disc deals with the theme of comedy, everyday life is in fact a bit of a comedy for everyone where everyone wears a mask without knowing if he is an actor or a spectator of life. And in 1999 the album Viaggiatore sulla coda del tempo, with the imminent arrival of the new millennium, tackles the theme of modern technologies and at the same time tells of the journey of a traveler towards this unknown future. Baglioni will subsequently declare that the three albums make up a trilogy of time where each represents the past, present and future respectively.

Baglioni in the mid-90s

On 6 June 1998 he made the last concert of the millennium at the Olympic stadium in Rome, the concert totaled over 100,000 spectators thanks to the stage in the center and the spectators who filled the stadium, still this record remains undefeated by any event, both musical and sporty.[7]

In the 2000s he released the album Sono io, In 2010 he did a series of concerts around the world. In 2013 he released the album Con voi and in 2020 the album In questa storia, che è la mia. In 2019 to celebrate 50 years of career, he realizes an incredible concert at the Verona Arena which for the first time is open to the public in its entirety. With the stage in the center and the spectators filling the entire arena in the round.[8][9][10]

Baglioni in 2010s

Discography[]

Studio albums

  • 1970 - Claudio Baglioni
  • 1971 - Un cantastorie dei giorni nostri
  • 1972 - Questo piccolo grande amore
  • 1973 - Gira che ti rigira amore bello
  • 1974 - E tu...
  • 1975 - Sabato pomeriggio
  • 1977 - Solo
  • 1978 - E tu come stai?
  • 1981 - Strada facendo
  • 1985 - La vita è adesso
  • 1990 - Oltre
  • 1995 - Io sono qui
  • 1999 - Viaggiatore sulla coda del tempo
  • 2003 - Sono io
  • 2013 - Con voi
  • 2020 - In questa storia, che è la mia

Live albums

  • 1982 - Alé Oó
  • 1986 - Assolo
  • 1992 - Assieme
  • 1996 - Attori e spettatori
  • 2000 - Acustico
  • 2010 - World Tour

European discography

  • 1985 - Claudio Baglioni[11]
  • 1991 - Oltre[12]

Dvds[]

  • 1991 - Oltre una bellissima notte
  • 1996 - Baglioni nel Rosso
  • 2000 - Acustico Tour
  • 2003 - Tutto in un abbraccio Tour
  • 2010 - World Tour
  • 2019 - Al centro - Arena di Verona

Tour[]

Baglioni after a concert on Tour 1985
  • 1977 - Claudio Baglioni on tour
  • 1982 - Alé Oó
  • 1985 - Tour 1985
  • 1986 - Assolo
  • 1991 - Oltre una bellissima notte (only one concert)
  • 1992 - Assieme
  • 1995 - Tour Giallo
  • 1996 - Tour Rosso
  • 1998 - Da me a te
  • 1999 - Tour Blu
  • 2000 - Acustico
  • 2003 - Tutto in un abbraccio
  • 2007 - Tutti qui
  • 2010 - World Tour
  • 2013 - Con voi tour
  • 2019 - Al centro

Awards[]

Baglioni receives an award in 1986

References[]

  1. ^ Balzarotti, Leda. "Claudio Baglioni festeggia 50 anni di carriera - Foto iO Donna". iO Donna (in Italian). Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  2. ^ "biography Baglioni, rockit".
  3. ^ "biography Baglioni, rockol".
  4. ^ "Baglioni MusicStory".
  5. ^ Claudio Baglioni – Claudio Baglioni (1985, Vinyl) (in Italian), retrieved 6 August 2021
  6. ^ Claudio Baglioni – Oltre (1991, Vinyl) (in Italian), retrieved 6 August 2021
  7. ^ "Stadio Olimpico: Rome Olympic Stadium [Largest sports facility in Rome]". Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  8. ^ s.r.l, Rockol com. "√ Biografia di Claudio Baglioni | Le ultime news, concerti e testi". Rockol (in Italian). Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  9. ^ s.r.l, Rockol com. "√ Claudio Baglioni: Biografia, Notizie, Discografia e Approfondimenti". Rockol (in Italian). Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  10. ^ "Claudio Baglioni: biografia, discografia e ultime news". Rolling Stone Italia (in Italian). Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  11. ^ Claudio Baglioni – Claudio Baglioni (1985, Vinyl), retrieved 6 August 2021
  12. ^ Claudio Baglioni – Oltre (1991, Vinyl), retrieved 6 August 2021

External links[]

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