Artist's albums
I Successi
2000 · album
Il meglio
1999 · album
Prima Del Temporale
1997 · album
Live in Tokyo
1996 · album
Tuttintorno
1996 · album
Giovane Vecchio Cuore
1995 · album
Giovane vecchio cuore (Sanremo 1995)
1995 · single
Italian Lady
2021 · album
Non ho l'età
2018 · single
Grandi Successi
2017 · album
Playlist: Gigiola Cinquetti
2016 · album
Il Meglio Di Gigliola Cinquetti: Grandi Successi
2016 · album
20.12
2015 · album
Lacrima in un oceano
2015 · single
I miei successi
2015 · album
Gigliola Cinquetti
2015 · album
Non ho l´eta (Remastered)
2014 · single
The Vatican Choir
2014 · album
Collezione privata (Private Collection)
2012 · album
Go (Before you break my heart)
2011 · single
No tengo edad
2011 · single
La Regina Di San Remo
2010 · album
Gigliola Cinquetti con Los Panchos
2007 · album
La Rosa Negra
1967 · EP
Gigliola per i più piccini
1967 · album
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Biography
Gigliola Cinquetti, the Italian winner of the 1964 Eurovision Song Contest, was born on December 20, 1947, in Verona. She first received attention at age 16, when she triumphed at the annual San Remo Song Contest in early 1964; just weeks later, she swept to victory at Eurovision, to set herself up for a stunningly successful career. Her winning entry at both events, incidentally, was "Non Ho L'Eta" (Not Old Enough). The song was a major hit throughout Europe, including the traditionally resistant U.K. "Dio, Some Ti Amo" brought Cinquetti further international success in 1966; among her other hits are "Piccola Cittá" (1967), "La Pioggia" (1969), "Amarti e Poi Morire," "Le Bateau Mouche" (1971), and "Je Suis Timide" (1972). Through this same period, her albums included Alle Porte del Sole, Auf der Straße der Sonne, Cantando con Gli Amici, Giovane Vecchio Cuore, Il Treno Dell'amore, Pensieri di Donna, and Stasera Ballo Liscio. After a decade spent topping the Italian charts, Cinquetti returned to Eurovision in 1974, this time performing "Si" -- and running into a political firestorm in her homeland. Italy was about to go to the polls for a referendum on the legalization of divorce. It was feared that the song's title, translating as "Yes," would be construed as a commentary upon the debate and might even act as a subliminal message to voters. Italy's national broadcasters RAI not only banned the song from the airwaves, but even censored it from their telecast of the Eurovision Song Contest itself. Still, "Si" finished second (behind ABBA's "Waterloo"), while an English-language version, "Go," gave Cinquetti her second U.K. hit. Since that time, Cinquetti has remained a force to be reckoned with in her homeland and beyond, and she returned once more to Eurovision in 1991 to co-host the event with the previous year's winner, Italian Toto Cutugno. ~ Dave Thompson, Rovi