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"Mare mare" (lit. "Sea sea"), also known " Mare mare (Bologna-Riccione) ", is a 1992 Italian song composed by Mauro Malavasi and Luca Carboni and performed by Luca Carboni. The music was composed by Carboni at his holiday home on Elba , while the lyrics were composed almost a year later, during a car trip from Riccione to Bologna , when Carboni ...
In 1924 with the Population exchange Muslims from Greece mainly from Veria (Karaferiye) settled in the town, while the Greeks of Cesme settled in Nea Erythraia and Nea Krini, Greece. Çeşme regained some its former lustre starting with the beginning of the 19th century, when its own products, notably grapes and mastic, found channels of export.
Italian "solfeggio" and English/French "solfège" derive from the names of two of the syllables used: sol and fa.[2] [3]The generic term "solmization", referring to any system of denoting pitches of a musical scale by syllables, including those used in India and Japan as well as solfège, comes from French solmisation, from the Latin solfège syllables sol and mi.
The naval Battle of Cheshme [7] (also the Battle of Chesma or Chesme) took place on 5–7 July 1770 during the Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774) near and in Çeşme (Cheshme, Chesma, or Chesme) Bay, in the area between the western tip of Anatolia and the island of Chios, which was the site of a number of past naval battles between the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Venice.
O sole mio" (Neapolitan pronunciation: [o ˈsoːlə ˈmiːə]) is a well-known Neapolitan song written in 1898. Its Neapolitan-language lyrics were written by Giovanni Capurro and the music was composed by Eduardo di Capua (1865–1917) and Alfredo Mazzucchi (1878–1972). [2]
"Stessa spiaggia, stesso mare" has been covered in French ("Tout s'arrange quand on s'aime") and in Spanish ("La misma playa"). "Mi guardano" has two different versions: in Spanish ("Me miran") and a second Italian version (for the 1970 album ...quando tu mi spiavi in cima a un batticuore...
As its composer also corroborated, "Sapore di sale" was composed in Capo d'Orlando, Sicily, "in a deserted house near a deserted beach," where Paoli was to hold concerts in a dance hall with his band and the venue's owner invited them to extend their stay for a fortnight. [1]
The group, which takes its name from the eponymous novel by Giuseppe Marotta, was born in the late sixties when two brothers of Naples, Paolo Morelli (piano and vocals) and Bruno Morelli (guitars), sons of a composer and of a pianist, decided moving in Rome to pursue a musical career and to be closer to the record companies; there they formed the group with Giulio Leofrigio (drums) and ...