Fausto Amodei

Italian folk singer-songwriter and musicologist (1934–2025)


title: "Fausto Amodei" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1934-births", "2025-deaths", "italian-folk-singers", "italian-male-singer-songwriters", "20th-century-italian-singer-songwriters", "20th-century-italian-male-singers", "21st-century-italian-singer-songwriters", "21st-century-italian-male-singers", "musicians-from-turin"] description: "Italian folk singer-songwriter and musicologist (1934–2025)" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fausto_Amodei" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Italian folk singer-songwriter and musicologist (1934–2025) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox musical artist"]

FieldValue
nameFausto Amodei
imageFausto Amodei daticamera.jpg
captionAmodei in 1968
birth_nameFausto Amodei
birth_date
birth_placeTurin, Italy
death_date
death_placeTurin, Italy
instrument
genreFolk music
occupationSinger-songwriter
years_active1958–2005
label
::

| name = Fausto Amodei | image = Fausto Amodei daticamera.jpg | caption = Amodei in 1968 | birth_name = Fausto Amodei | alias = | birth_date = | birth_place = Turin, Italy | death_date = | death_place = Turin, Italy | origin = | instrument = | genre = Folk music | occupation = Singer-songwriter | years_active = 1958–2005 | label =

Fausto Amodei (18 June 1934 – 18 September 2025) was an Italian folk singer-songwriter and musicologist.

Life and career

Amodei began his musical career in 1958, founding the band Cantacronache. In his songs, he used irony and satire, a style inspired by the French singer Georges Brassens. In the early 1960s he became active in the magazine Nuovo Canzoniere Italiano and in 1968 he was elected member of the Italian parliament as a member of the Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity (PSIUP). The singer Francesco Guccini cited Amodei in interviews and books as one of his principal influences as a composer.

One of Amodei's most famous songs is Per i morti di Reggio Emilia (For the Dead of Reggio Emilia), dedicated to the demonstrators killed by the police during a protest on 7 July 1960. In 1985 the Italian punk-rock band CCCP titled their third EP with the first verse of this ballad: Compagni, Cittadini, Fratelli, Partigiani.

Amodei died in Turin on 18 September 2025, at the age of 91.

Discography

The discography is listed in a chronological order.

References

Literature

  • Margherita Zorzi: "Fausto Amodei – Canzoni di satira e di Rivolta" – 2008,

References

  1. Bibliographic source: "''Un altro giorno è andato: Francesco Guccini si racconta a Massimo Cotto''". [[Florence]], Giunti, 1999. {{ISBN. 88-09-02164-9
  2. [https://www.lastampa.it/torino/2025/09/18/news/fausto_amodei_cantautore_politico_morto-15313810/ Addio a Fausto Amodei, fondatore dei “Cantacronache” e voce della protesta civile e politica] {{in lang. it
  3. "Webage with many of the albums of Amodei".

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1934-births2025-deathsitalian-folk-singersitalian-male-singer-songwriters20th-century-italian-singer-songwriters20th-century-italian-male-singers21st-century-italian-singer-songwriters21st-century-italian-male-singersmusicians-from-turin