Giuliano Sangiorgi (born 24 January 1979) is an Italian singer, songwriter and composer, forming part of the rock band Negramaro.

Giuliano Sangiorgi
Sangiorgi in 2017
Sangiorgi in 2017
Background information
Born (1979-01-24) 24 January 1979 (age 45)
Nardò, Lecce, Italy
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter, musician
LabelsSugar Music

Career edit

Giuliano is not only the writer and singer for Negramaro, but he is also a songwriter and composer for other singers and cinematic productions.

In 2005 he began collaborating with the Italian cinema:

  • Eight pieces from Negramaro's album “Mentre tutto scorre” became the soundtrack for Alessandro D’Alatri's film “La Febbre”.[1]
  • The piece "Mentre tutto scorre", written and composed by Giuliano Sangiorgi, won the Premio della Critica Radio e TV at the Sanremo Music Festival, the Nastro D’Argento as best song and best soundtrack and the SIAE Prize for its success, for the number of records sold, for public executions (concerts and discos), television, radio and cinemas.[2]
  • The song "Solo per te" was nominated for Donatello's David Award.
  • In 2007 he was co-author and co-interpreter with Dolores O’Riordan for the piece "Senza fiato", title track for Marco Martani's film "Cemento Armato".[3]
  • In 2008 he wrote the whole soundtrack for Daniele Gangemi’s film "Una notte blu cobalto",[4] which won the prize as best "first work" at Worldfest International Independent Film Festival of Houston.[5]
  • He wrote the soundtrack for Marcello and Dario Baldi’s film "Narciso", winning a prize at Festival del Cinema di Salerno in the criteria "Nuovo cinema Italia" at Napoli film festival.[6]
  • In 2009 he signed the soundtrack for Giovanni Veronesi’s "Italians".[7]
  • In 2010 he wrote the soundtrack for the film "Vallanzasca-Gli angeli del male" directed by Michele Placido[8] and presented, out of competition, at the 67th Venice Film Festival, the film was first shown in cinemas in January 2011 and the band obtained the Nastro D’Argento for the best original soundtrack.[9]

It is a long love story, the one between Giuliano Sangiorgi and the cinema: “Music and Cinema”, this is why many of Negramaro’s videos are directed by directors, such as D’Alatri, Placido and Veronesi.

He wrote, with Paolo Buonvino, "Tutto può succedere" for the theme song of the homonym TV show– produced by Cattleya and on air on RAI Uno.[10]

As a writer, in 2012 his book "Lo spacciatore di Carne" was published by Einaudi.[11]

Songwriter for other artists edit

As a songwriter and composer for other artists, Giuliano Sangiorgi wrote:

  • In 2004 “Le parole che non ti ho detto” for Andrea Bocelli’s album "Andrea", which reached over 60 million copies sold in the world.
  • In 2006 he participated to Corrado Rustici's album "Deconstruction of a post modern musician" for the piece "Maledette Stelle".
  • In 2008 he made a duet with Cristina Donà in "Settembre”
  • In 2008 he wrote and interpreted, with Lorenzo Jovanotti Cherubini, the hit "Safari”
  • In 2009 he wrote "Come foglie" for Malika Ayane, this piece made her one of the winners in the youth criteria for the 2009 Sanremo Music Festival
  • In 2009 he designed and promoted, with Lorenzo Jovanotti Cherubini and Mauro Pagani, the "Domani 24/04.09" project, where the objective was to raise funds for the reconstruction of the cultural centres, destroyed by the earthquake which occurred on 6 April 2009.

He also wrote:

In 2017

List of awards edit

  • M.E.I. prize.
  • The Prize "Videoclip Italiano" (PVI).
  • The "Mia Martini Prize"
  • The Festivalbar first as revelation group and then as the winners.
  • The Lunezia Prize

The careers of songwriter and frontman of Negramaro Band edit

He formed Negramaro’s band in 1999: six musicians from Lecce who have become a breakthrough act in the Italian pop-rock music scene.

  • The first album "000577" (2003) featured Corrado Rustici (Eric Clapton, Sinead O’Connor, Andrea Bocelli, Zucchero, Elisa) as Artistic Producer
  • In 2005 the band shared the stage with Oasis at Heineken Jammin' Festival and joined LIVE 8 in Rome.
  • Negramaro won Best Italian Act at Europe Music Awards 2005, in Lisbon
  • "Mentre Tutto Scorre" reached multiplatinum status.
  • Their third album "La finestra" (2007) was recorded at the Plant Studios in San Francisco and the "special edition" of the album, hosted a very special guest appearance: Dolores O’Riordan on “Senza fiato”:
  • Negramaro performed on 31 May 2008, at football stadium San Siro, as the first Italian band ever.
  • “Negramaro San Siro live” (2008) was Negramaro's first live career CD+DVD, with 8 live versions of their most famous songs, 5 unpublished songs, the San Siro's concert and several extra contents.
  • In 2010 the band wrote the soundtrack of Michele Placido's movie “Vallanzasca – Gli Angeli del Male”, presented at the 67th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia. In the same year they released CASA69, produced by David Bottrill (Placebo and many other), in Toronto.
  • The band exceed over 1 million records sold only in ItalyNegramaro filled the stadiums again throughout the last June–July in Milan and Rome to follow up the #1 position on the Italian Chart after six months from the release of their Best Of “Una Storia Semplice”.
  • They also played in some European Festivals in Europe: “Impact Festival”, “Tonhalle”, “Dortmunder Music Week” and London's “Hard Rock Calling”.
  • 2016 was an intense year of musical activity. He went on a live tour with Negramaro, that sold out and had a gran finale at the Arena di Verona (first Italian band to play in the Arena di Verona)
  • On 17 November 2017, he released the new album "Amore che torni"[14]

He published nine albums with Negramaro edit

  • "000577" (2004)
  • "Mentre tutto scorre" (2005)
  • "La finestra" (2007)
  • "Negramaro San Siro Live" (2008)
  • "Casa 69" (2010)
  • "Una storia semplice" (2012)
  • "La rivoluzione sta arrivando" (2015)
  • "Amore che torni" (2017)
  • "Contatto" (2020)

References edit

  1. ^ "È firmata Negramaro la colonna sonora di Vallanzasca". Music Fanpage (in Italian). Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  2. ^ CHIA, JESSICA. "Sangiorgi e i Negramaro, storia di un sogno". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  3. ^ TC&C. "Musicalnews.com: Giuliano Sangiorgi e Dolores O'Riordan duettano per Cemento armato, il film noir con Faletti". musicalnews.com (in Italian). Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  4. ^ "Daniele Gangemi e il cast presentano 'Una notte blu cobalto'". Movieplayer.it (in Italian). Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  5. ^ "CINEMA: GANGEMI VINCE PREMIO OPERA PRIMA AL FESTIVAL DI HOUSTON". www1.adnkronos.com (in Italian). Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  6. ^ Milano-Firenze, Mo-Net s.r.l. "Narciso – Dietro ai cannoni, davanti ai muli (2008)". mymovies.it. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  7. ^ "CINEMA/ Italians: Castellitto, Scamarcio e Verdone davvero come tutti noi italiani?". Il Sussidiario.net. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  8. ^ Milano-Firenze, Mo-Net s.r.l. "Vallanzasca – Gli angeli del male (2010)". mymovies.it. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  9. ^ "Tornano i Negramaro con la colonna sonora di "Vallanzasca – Gli angeli del male" | TV Sorrisi e Canzoni". TV Sorrisi e Canzoni (in Italian). 6 September 2010. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  10. ^ "Giuliano Sangiorgi e Paolo Buonvino firmano 'Tutto può succedere', la sigla della nuova fiction di Rai1" (in Italian). 8 December 2015. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  11. ^ ""Lo spacciatore di carne" il romanzo di Sangiorgi – Napoli – Repubblica.it". Napoli – La Repubblica. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  12. ^ "Giuliano Sangiorgi e la colonna sonora di Non è un paese per giovani, videointervista". Spettacolomania.it (in Italian). 23 March 2017. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  13. ^ "negramaro, Ecco il video di Fino All'Imbrunire". News Mtv Italia. 16 October 2017. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  14. ^ Antonucci, Gabriele (17 November 2017). "Negramaro: "Amore che torni", quando dalla crisi nasce la luce – Recensione – Panorama". Panorama (in Italian). Retrieved 17 November 2017.