"Vecchio frac" (literally "Old tailcoat") is a 1955 song written by Italian singer-songwriter Domenico Modugno.

"Vecchio frac"
Single by Domenico Modugno
A-side"Vecchio frac"
B-side"E vene 'o sole"
ReleasedSeptember 1955
GenrePop
Length6 min: 11 sec
LabelRCA Italiana
Songwriter(s)Domenico Modugno
Adriano Celentano singles chronology
"Mese 'e settembre"
(1955)
"Vecchio frac"
(1955)
"Cantu d'Amuri"
(1955)

The song is a dramatic ballad, with Modugno telling a story about an elegant man in tailcoat who is walking at midnight through the deserted streets and at dawn he commits suicide, and Modugno does not know who this man is and where he comes from. This song got its inspiration from the death of nobleman Raimondo Lanza di Trabia, the husband of actress Olga Villi, who committed suicide by jumping from a window of Hotel Eden in Rome,[1][2] as well as from a short film by a close friend of Modugno, Riccardo Pazzaglia.[1]

The song was initially ignored by audiences, eventually coming to success just after the Sanremo Festival triumphs of Modugno with "Nel blu, dipinto di blu" and "Piove (Ciao, ciao bambina)" and thanks to a RCA reissue, in a slightly modified version.[1][2] Artists who covered the song include French singers Barbara and Colette Renard (with the title "L'homme en habit", with lyrics by Pierre Delanoë), Đorđe Marjanović (in a Slavic version titled "Stari Frack"), Claudio Villa (on his album Claudio Villa canta Modugno), Gabriella Ferri and Enrico Ruggeri.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Ezio Guaitamacchi (2009). "Vecchio frac". 1000 canzoni che ci hanno cambiato la vita (in Italian). Rizzoli. ISBN 978-8858617427.
  2. ^ a b c Dario Salvatori (2001). "Vecchio frac". Dizionario delle canzoni italiane. Elle U. ISBN 8888169016.
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