The Sanremo Music Festival 1994 (Italian: Festival di Sanremo 1994), officially the 44th Italian Song Festival (44º Festival della canzone italiana), was the 44th annual Sanremo Music Festival, held at the Teatro Ariston in Sanremo in late February 1994 and broadcast by Rai 1. The show was presented by Pippo Baudo, who also served as the artistic director, with singer Anna Oxa (who had won the festival in 1989) and model Cannelle. Antonella Clerici hosted the segments with the juries.[1][2]
Sanremo Music Festival 1994 | |
---|---|
Dates | |
Semi-final 1 | 23 February 1994 |
Semi-final 2 | 24 February 1994 |
Semi-final 3 | 25 February 1994 |
Final | 26 February 1994 |
Host | |
Venue | Teatro Ariston Sanremo, Liguria, Italy |
Presenter(s) | Pippo Baudo and Anna Oxa, Cannelle |
Musical director | Pippo Caruso |
Artistic director | Pippo Baudo |
Host broadcaster | Rai 1 |
Big Artists section | |
Number of entries | 20 |
Winner | Aleandro Baldi "Passerà" |
Newcomers' section | |
Number of entries | 18 |
Winner | Andrea Bocelli "Il mare calmo della sera" |
The winner of the Big Artists section was Aleandro Baldi with the ballad "Passerà", while Giorgio Faletti ranked second and won the Critics Award with "Signor tenente", an anti-mafia rap song inspired by massacres of Capaci and Via D'Amelio. Andrea Bocelli won the Newcomers section with the song "Il mare calmo della sera".[1]
After every night Rai 1 broadcast DopoFestival, a talk show about the Festival with the participation of singers and journalists. It was hosted by Mara Venier and Pippo Baudo with Renato Zero and Roberto D'Agostino.[1][2]
Participants and results
editBig Artists
editBig Artists section [1] | ||
---|---|---|
Song, performing artist(s) and writer(s) | Rank | Notes |
"Passerà" – Aleandro Baldi (Aleandro Baldi, Giancarlo Bigazzi, Marco Falagiani) |
1 |
|
"Signor tenente" – Giorgio Faletti (Giorgio Faletti) |
2 |
|
"Strani amori" – Laura Pausini (Angelo Valsiglio, Roberto Buti, Cheope, Marco Marati, Francesco Tanini) |
3 | |
"Non è un film" – Gerardina Trovato (Angelo Anastasio, Celso Valli, Gerardina Trovato) |
4 | |
"Cinque giorni" – Michele Zarrillo (Vincenzo Incenzo, Michele Zarrillo) |
5 | |
"I soliti accordi" – Enzo Jannacci & Paolo Rossi (Enzo Jannacci, Paolo Rossi, Paolo Jannacci) |
6 | |
"Maledette malelingue" - Ivan Graziani (Ivan Graziani) |
7 | |
"Amare amare" - Andrea Mingardi (Andrea Mingardi, Maurizio Tirelli) |
8 | |
"Esser duri" - Marco Armani (Marco Armenise, Luca Carboni) |
9 | |
"Di notte specialmente" - Donatella Rettore (Cheope, Donatella Rettore, Claudio Rego) |
10 | |
"Terra mia" - Mariella Nava (Mariella Nava) |
11 | |
"La casa dell'imperatore" - Formula 3 (Tony Cicco, Mario Castelnuovo) |
12 | |
"Amici non ne ho" - Loredana Bertè (Loredana Bertè, Philippe Leon) |
13 | |
"Crescerai" - Alessandro Canino (Bruno Zucchetti, Giuseppe Dati, Stefano Busà) |
14 | |
"Statento" - Francesco Salvi (Francesco Salvi, Vittorio Cosma) |
15 | |
"Oppure no" – Alessandro Bono (Alessandro Bono) |
16 | |
"Se mi ami…" - Claudia Mori (Toto Cutugno) |
17 | |
"L'ascensore" - Carlo Marrale (Carlo Marrale, Cheope) |
18 | |
"Una vecchia canzone italiana" - Squadra Italia[a] (Stefano Jurgens, Marcello Marrocchi) |
19 | |
"Napoli" - Franco Califano (Franco Califano, Alberto Laurenti, Antonio Gaudino) |
20 |
Newcomers
editNewcomers section [1] | ||
---|---|---|
Song, performing artist(s) and writer(s) | Rank | Notes |
"Il mare calmo della sera" - Andrea Bocelli (Malise, Gian Pietro Felisatti, Gloria Nuti) |
1 |
|
"Ricordi del cuore" - Antonella Arancio (Claudio Allia, Ray Distefano) |
2 | |
"Quelli come noi" - Danilo Amerio (Danilo Amerio) |
3 | |
"Fuori" - Irene Grandi (Telonio, Irene Grandi) |
4 | |
"Così vivrai" - Valeria Visconti (Ermanno Croce, Rossano Eleuteri) |
5 | |
"Possiamo realizzare i nostri sogni" - Lighea (Stefano Jurgens, Tania Montelpare, Giulio Galgani) |
6 | |
"E poi" - Giorgia (Giorgia Todrani, Massimo Calabrese, Marco Rinalduzzi) |
7 | |
"Il mondo è qui" - Francesca Schiavo (Varo Venturi) |
8 | |
"Il mondo dove va" - Silvia Cecchetti (Vincenzo Benedetto Scanu) |
9 | |
"Senti uomo" - Giò Di Tonno (Giovanni Di Tonno, Alessandro Di Zio) |
10 | |
"Cuore cuore" - Paola Angeli (Paola Angeli) |
Eliminated | |
"È solo un giorno nero" - Simona D'Alessio (Carmen Di Domenico, Claudio Pizzale) |
Eliminated | |
"I giardini d'Alhambra" - Baraonna (Fulvio Caporale, Vito Caporale) |
Eliminated |
|
"Io e il mio amico Neal" - Daniela Colace (Michele Ascolese, Daniela Colace) |
Eliminated | |
"Ma che sarei" - Franz Campi (Franz Campi) |
Eliminated | |
"Non spegnere i tuoi occhi" - Joe Barbieri (Joe Barbieri) |
Eliminated | |
"Propiziu ventu" - Paideja (Tina Nicoletta, Valeria Nicoletta) |
Eliminated | |
"Senza un dolore" - Daniele Fossati (Daniele Fossati) |
Eliminated |
Guests
editGuests [1][2] | |
---|---|
Artist(s) | Song(s) |
Matt Bianco | "Our Love" |
Take That | "Relight My Fire" |
k.d. lang | "Constant Craving" |
Incognito | "Givin' It Up" |
Dee Dee Bridgewater & Amii Stewart | "Why" |
Phil Collins | "Everyday" |
Elton John & RuPaul | "Don't Go Breaking My Heart" |
Broadcasts
editLocal broadcasts
editAll shows were broadcast on Rai Uno.
International broadcasts
editThe festival was also aired on Rai Internazionale Americas on delay via W13BF with the 1st and 2nd part of the final being broadcast.[3][4] Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators are shown in the tables below.
Country | Broadcaster | Channel(s) | Commentator(s) | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
United States | WNYC-TV[b] | [5][6][7] | ||
WNYS-TV[c] | [8] |
Notes and references
editNotes
edit- ^ Squadra Italia was a supergroup formed by Nilla Pizzi, Mario Merola, Jimmy Fontana, Wilma Goich, Rosanna Fratello, Lando Fiorini, Gianni Nazzaro, Wess, Toni Santagata, Giuseppe Cionfoli and Manuela Villa (Claudio Villa's daughter).[1]
- ^ Delayed broadcast with the parts 1–3 broadcast on 1–3 March respectively, all aired at 18:00 (EDT) with only 2 hours being broadcast in each part.[5][6][7]
- ^ Delayed broadcast with the first part broadcast on 27 February at 18:00 (EDT),[8]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g Eddy Anselmi. Festival di Sanremo: almanacco illustrato della canzone italiana. Panini Comics, 2009. ISBN 8863462291.
- ^ a b c "Non solo Rai: Quattro serate con Baudo, Oxa e le altre TV". La Repubblica. 23 February 1994. p. 35. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
- ^ "Tue. Logs – 9:30 p.m.". Hartford Courant TV Week. Hartford, Connecticut. 27 February – 5 March 1994. p. CX.
- ^ "Wednesday Broadcast Channel Programs / March 2". Hartford Courant TV Week. Syracuse, New York. 27 February – 5 March 1994. p. 36.
- ^ a b "Sunday". Newsday TV Plus. Melville, New York. 3–9 March 1991. p. 22.
- ^ a b "Wednesday: Prime-time at a glance". The Reporter Dispatch – TV Book. White Plains, New York. 27 February – 5 March 1994. p. 30.
- ^ a b "Thursday Primetime". The Record Television & Cable. West Paterson, New Jersey. 27 February – 5 March 1994. p. 22.
- ^ a b "Sunday". Syracuse Herald-Journal TV Cable Guide. Syracuse, New York. 27 February – 5 March 1994. p. 49.