Marcella Bella
Giuseppa Marcella Bella (born 18 June 1952), known as just Marcella Bella or simply Marcella, is an Italian pop singer with a career spanning six decades. Her repertoire includes several songs composed by her brother Gianni.
Marcella Bella | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Giuseppa Marcella Bella |
Born | Catania, Italy | 18 June 1952
Genres | Pop |
Occupation(s) | Singer |
Years active | 1965–present |
Life and career
Born in Catania into an artistic family (her brothers Antonio and Salvatore are musicians, and her brother Gianni is a singer-songwriter), Bella started her career at very young age, and in 1965 she won the Festival degli sconosciuti, a victory that was not validated because she was two years younger than the rules required.[1][2] She made her record debut in 1969, with the single "Il pagliaccio", using the mononym Marcella.[1][2]
Bella got her first success in 1971, with the single "Hai ragione tu".[1] In 1972, she had her breakthrogh taking part in the Sanremo Music Festival with "Montagne verdi", a semi-autobiographical song penned by her brother Gianni which turned to be a massive commercial hit.[1][2][3] She later performed in other musical events, being a finalist in the 1973 edition of Canzonissima with "Un sorriso e poi perdonami", and winning the Festivalbar with "Io domani".[1] Other significant successes of the decade include "Nessuno mai", later covered by Boney M. in an English version titled "Take the Heat off Me" and included in their eponymous album, "Abbracciati", which she presented out of competition at the 1977 Sanremo Festival, and her cover version of Domenico Modugno's canzone napoletana classic "Resta cu' mme".[1][2]
After a period of relative tarnish, in the early 1980s Bella began recording under her full name, and achieved an impressive success in 1983 with "Nell'aria", a song penned by Mogol together with her brother Gianni.[1][2] Other hits followed across the whole decade, mainly linked to her partecipations to the Sanremo Festival, notably "Senza un briciolo di testa" (third place at Sanremo 1986), "Tanti auguri" (Sanremo 1987), "Dopo la tempesta" (Sanremo 1988) and "Verso l'ignoto" (a duet with Gianni Bella presented at Sanremo 1990).[1] In the 1990s she slowed her activities.[2] In 2004 she ran in the European Parliament election with National Alliance party, being not elected.[3] In 2005, she returned to the Sanremo Festival after a fifteen-year absence with the song "Uomo bastardo", ranking second in the "classics" tournament.[2][3]
Italian discography
Singles
- 1969: "Il pagliaccio"
- 1969: "Bocca dolce"
- 1971: "Hai ragione tu"
- 1972: "Montagne verdi"
- 1972: "Sole che nasce sole che muore"
- 1972: "Un sorriso e poi perdonami"
- 1973: "Io domani"
- 1973: "Mi...ti...amo"
- 1974: "Nessuno mai"
- 1974: "L'avvenire"
- 1975: "E quando"
- 1975: "Negro"
- 1976: "Resta cu' mme"
- 1976: "Abbracciati"
- 1977: "Non m'importa più"
- 1978: "Mi vuoi"
- 1979: "Lady anima"
- 1979: "Camminando e cantando"
- 1980: "Baciami"
- 1981: "Pensa per te"
- 1981: "Canto straniero"
- 1981: "Mi mancherai*
- 1982: "Problemi"
- 1983: "Nell'aria"
- 1984: "Nel mio cielo puro"
- 1985: "L'ultima poesia" (with Gianni Bella)
- 1986: "Senza un briciolo di testa"
- 1987: "Tanti auguri"
- 1988: "Dopo la tempesta"
- 1990: "Verso l'ignoto" (with Gianni Bella)
- 1998: "È un miracolo" (with Gianni Bella)
- 2002: "La regina del silenzio"
- 2007: "Forever per sempre"
- 2012: "Malecon"
- 2012: "Femmina bella"
LP, CD
- 1972: Tu non-hai la più pallida idea dell'amore
- 1973: Mi..ti..amo...
- 1974: Metamorfosi
- 1975: L'anima dei matti
- 1976: Bella
- 1977: Femmina
- 1979: Camminando e cantando
- 1981: Marcella Bella
- 1982: Problemi
- 1983: Nell'aria
- 1984: Nel mio cielo puro
- 1986: Senza un briciolo di testa
- 1987: Tanti auguri
- 1988: '88
- 1990: Canta Battisti
- 1990: Verso l'ignoto...
- 1991: Sotto il vulcano
- 1993: Tommaso!
- 1995: Anni dorati
- 1998: Finalmente insieme
- 2002: Passato e presente
- 2005: Uomo bastardo
- 2007: Forever per sempre (with Gianni Bella)
- 2012: Femmina bella
References
- Lalla Cantore. "Marcella (Marcella Bella)". Gino Castaldo (edited by). Dizionario della canzone italiana. Curcio Editore, 1990. pp. 990-1.
- Enrico Deregibus. "Marcella Bella". Dizionario completo della Canzone Italiana. Giunti Editore, 2010. p. 54. ISBN 8809756258.
- Eddy Anselmi (20 August 2023). "Marcella Bella". Festival di Sanremo: almanacco illustrato della canzone italiana. Panini Comics, 2009. ISBN 978-8863462296.
External links
Media related to Marcella Bella at Wikimedia Commons
- Marcella Bella at AllMusic
- Marcella Bella discography at Discogs