Che sarà

"Che sarà"
Song by José Feliciano and Ricchi e Poveri
Language Italian
English title "What Will Be"
Published 1971
Composer(s) Jimmy Fontana
Lyricist(s) Franco Migliacci

Che sarà (Italian: [ke ssaˈra]; English: "What will (it) be") is an Italian song, written by Jimmy Fontana (music) and Franco Migliacci (lyrics) for the 1971 Sanremo Music Festival. Up until that year, each song was interpreted by two artists or performers to showcase the songwriters' craft rather than the singers' interpretations.

Che sarà was sung by José Feliciano and the Ricchi e Poveri group and came second to Il Cuore E' Uno Zingaro. RCA's Italian producers saw the song and the festival as a way to bring José Feliciano, already an international star, to Italy, as he already knew Jimmy Fontana. Although Ricchi e Poveri was a new, young group, it was chosen to sing the second version after Gianni Morandi, a well known Italian singer and RCA artist, had declined to sing the song. Jimmy Fontana, reportedly, was disappointed by RCA's decision and withdrew from the music business for many years.

Recordings

Feliciano's recorded version was successful in Italy, in Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Japan.[1] It was an even greater success in Latin America and Spain in Feliciano's Spanish version, titled Qué será. Feliciano's version peaked at number one in Spain.[2] An English-language version titled Shake A Hand charted in Scandinavia but not in the Top Tens of the USA or the UK.[3]

Song

The lyrics of the song describe the singer's sadness at having to leave his native village (Paese mio che stai sulla collina disteso come un vecchio addormentato; Oh my village set on the hill, lying down like an old, sleeping man) and were inspired by Cortona, a small town in Tuscany where the lyricist, Franco Migliacci, had lived for many years.[4] For Jimmy Fontana, who wrote the music, the song is devoted to Bernalda, his wife's home village[5]

Coincidentally, the Cortona story echoes the personal history of José Feliciano, who was born in the hill village of Lares in Puerto Rico, and who left it for New York, joining many other Puerto Rican migrants to the USA. In fact, the Spanish version of the song is considered by many in the Latino population to be a migrants' hymn.[6]

Chart positions

Version/Title° Country Position
IT / Che Sarà Italy 2,[7][8]
IT / Che Sarà The Netherlands 1 [9]
IT / Che Sarà Austria 1
IT / Che Sarà Germany 7
IT / Che Sarà Belgium 2
SP / Qué Será Spain 1
SP / Qué Será Argentina 2[10]
SP / Qué Será Puerto Rico 7[10]
EN / Shake a Hand Sweden 1 '[10]
EN / Shake a Hand Denmark 1[10]
EN / Shake a Hand Norway 9[10]
FI / Toivotaan Finland 9[10]

Foreign language versions

Country Title Artist
Iceland Góða ferð BG og Ingibjörg
Bulgaria Spri do men Lea Ivanova[11]
Sweden Aldrig mer Hootenanny Singers
Czech republic Nádherná Pavel Novák
France Qui saura Mike Brant
Vietnam Đôi bờ Anh Tú, Lê Cát Trọng Lý
Hungary Mit remélsz? Kovács Kati[12]

References

  1. ... "Che Sarà", a mega-success in Europe, Asia and South America ..., http://www.josefeliciano.com, biography page.
  2. "Hits of the World". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. 83 (24): 52. 1971-06-12. Retrieved 2013-05-13.
  3. "''Hitparade - Top 10 - US 1970 bis 1972'' (in German)". Wbrnet.info. 1939-07-12. Retrieved 2012-03-10.
  4. ... Migliacci dedicated to Cortona the beautiful song “Che Sarà ...” (in Italian).
  5. ... by Jimmy Fontana, one of the authors of the song played by Ricchi e Poveri and by Feliciano, the song is dedicated to Bernalda, in Basilicata, the village where his wife comes from (in Italian)].
  6. José Feliciano – Che sarà
  7. "www.hitparadeitalia.it". www.hitparadeitalia.it. Retrieved 2012-03-10.
  8. "www.hitparadeitalia.it". www.hitparadeitalia.it. Retrieved 2012-03-10.
  9. Steffen Hung. "dutchcharts.nl/". dutchcharts.nl/. Retrieved 2012-03-10.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Jose Feliciano Charts" (in Italian). FantasticFeliciano.too.it. Retrieved 2012-03-10.
  11. BG ESTRADA (28 January 2013). "Леа Иванова - Спри до мен (1971)" via YouTube.
  12. CerrusZo (15 June 2010). "Kovács Kati: Mit remélsz/ Csúzlis Tom/ Most kéne abbahagyni; Egyveleg 1971." via YouTube.

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