Come prima
"Come prima" (English: "As Before") is an Italian song, with lyrics by Mario Panzeri and music by Vincenzo Di Paola and Sandro Taccani. First made popular by Tony Dallara in Italy in 1957, a version by the Marino Marini Quartet was a hit in the United Kingdom in 1958.
Versions
The first and most popular version of "Come prima" in
In 1958
Also in 1958,
In 1958, a version of the song recorded by the Marino Marini Quartet made the United Kingdom charts. That same year, the song was also recorded by Domenico Modugno, Nicola Arigliano and Armando Trovajoli's orchestra with singer Miranda Martino. The following year, the song was a hit for Dalida under the same song title, but with lyrics sung in French. Besides being translated in English, "Come prima" ended up being translated to Croatian and was released as "Kao prije" in 1958 as a solo record by Ivo Robić.
The song's music also served as the basis of an English language song, "More Than Ever", with lyrics by Mary Bond, recorded in the United Kingdom by Malcolm Vaughan with the Michael Sammes Singers (HMV catalogue number POP 538) (14 weeks on the UK chart, peaking at #5),[3] Robert Earl (4 weeks on the UK chart, peaking at #26),[4] Eve Boswell, and others. Another English language lyric version of the song under the title "For the First Time", by Buck Ram, was recorded in the United States by Polly Bergen in 1958 (Columbia Records catalog number 41275). This version was also performed by Mario Lanza in his last film, For the First Time (1959).
Other performers who recorded versions of the song were The Platters (1958), Willy Alberti (1958), Dean Martin, Muslim Magomayev (1961), Tony Reno & the Sherwoods (1965), and Golpes Bajos (1985). Cliff Richard sang it in Italian on his album When In Rome (1965).
In 1991, Hong Kong actress Gloria Yip recorded a cover version of the song in Japanese.
In 2012, Belgian singer Frank Galan recorded a Dutch version of the song, entitled Valentina, which he included on his album Mooier dan woorden.
Brazilian superstar
In 2017, Dallara's recording was used in both a UK Coca-Cola commercial[5] and a Fiat 500 commercial.
References
- ISBN 8863462291.
- ^ "DALIDA". artisteschartsventes.blogspot.fr. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
- ^ UK chart listing for Malcolm Vaughan's version
- ^ UK chart listing for Robert Earl's version
- ^ "Coca-Cola – Poolboy". TV Ad Music. 31 May 2017. Retrieved 15 July 2017.