"Addio, addio" (English translation: "Goodbye, Goodbye") was the Italian entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1962, performed in Italian by Claudio Villa.
With music by Domenico Modugno and lyrics by Franco Migliacci (the same duo had collaborated on Modugno's previous entry Nel blu dipinto di blu (Volare)), the song is a ballad, in which Villa attempts to deal with the end of a relationship. He sings that "Our love has become salt like sea water/Our parched lips don't have words any longer", but clings to the hope that "It isn't true that our love has ended", indeed even as he farewells his former lover for the last time he sings "we love each other and that we're breaking up".
The song was performed fifteenth on the night (following Luxembourg's Camillo Felgen with "Petit bonhomme" and preceding Monaco's François Deguelt with "Dis rien"). At the close of voting, it had received 3 points, placing 9th in a field of 16. The comparatively high place for a low-scoring song is partly explained by the fact that four entries at this Contest failed to record a point.
No No you fucker your smoking that trash all wrong save that for the bitchs
Give me a second fucker I'm make a phone call real quick
Hey hey say what the fuck is the deal with you fucker
anit nothin' fucker I'm just tryin' to show this youg fucker how to smoke
I need a pound of your sweetest chiver alright
mouther fucker tell that fucker watch out for tha police
or that fucker be back on the boat hurry up though
Bigh money
You know I do it
Alright cut that shit out too
who the hell he think he is
These mother fucker anit nobody he anit nothing
I smoke wit the best of them