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Sanremo Music Festival 1968

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Sanremo Music Festival 1968
Dates
Semi-final 11 February 1968
Semi-final 22 February 1968
Final3 February 1968
Host
VenueSanremo Casino
Sanremo, Liguria, Italy
Presenter(s)Pippo Baudo
and Luisa Rivelli
Artistic directorGianni Ravera
Host broadcasterProgramma Nazionale
Websitewww.raiplay.it/programmi/sanremo1968 Edit this at Wikidata
Vote
Number of entries24
WinnerSergio Endrigo and Roberto Carlos
"Canzone per te"
1967 ← Sanremo Music Festival → 1969

The Sanremo Music Festival 1968 (Italian: Festival di Sanremo 1968), officially the 18th Italian Song Festival (18º Festival della canzone italiana), was the 18th annual Sanremo Music Festival, held at the Sanremo Casino in Sanremo, Italy, between 1 and 3 February 1968[1] and presented by Pippo Baudo, assisted by actress Luisa Rivelli.[1]

According to the rules of this edition every song was performed in a double performance by a couple of singers or groups.[1] The winners of the festival were Sergio Endrigo and Roberto Carlos with the song "Canzone per te".[1] Endrigo went was thus selected to represent Italy at the Eurovision Song Contest 1968, with "Marianne".

Participants and results

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Sergio Endrigo (left) and Roberto Carlos holding the first prize
Participants and results[1]
Song, performing artist(s) and writer(s) Rank
"Canzone per te" – Sergio Endrigo, Roberto Carlos
(Sergio Endrigo, Sergio Bardotti)
1
"Casa bianca" – Ornella Vanoni, Marisa Sannia
(Don Backy, Eligio La Valle)
2
"Canzone" – Adriano Celentano, Milva
(Don Backy, Detto Mariano)
3
"Deborah" – Fausto Leali, Wilson Pickett
(Vito Pallavicini, Giorgio Conte)
4
"La tramontana" - Antoine, Gianni Pettenati
(Daniele Pace, Mario Panzeri)
5
"Quando m'innamoro" - Anna Identici, The Sandpipers
(Mario Panzeri, Daniele Pace, Roberto Livraghi)
6
"Da bambino" - Massimo Ranieri, I Giganti
(Riccardo Pradella, Renato Angiolini)
7
"Sera" - Gigliola Cinquetti, Giuliana Valci
(Roberto Vecchioni, Andrea Lo Vecchio)
8
"La siepe" – Al Bano, Bobbie Gentry
(Vito Pallavicini, Pino Massara)
9
"Un uomo piange solo per amore" - Little Tony, Mario Guarnera
( Petaluma, Mario Vicari, Marcello Marrocchi)
10
"’Gli occhi miei" - Wilma Goich, Dino
(Mogol, Carlo Donida)
11
"Stanotte sentirai una canzone" - Annarita Spinaci, Yoko Kishi
(Tato Queirolo, Franco Bracardi)
12
"Mi va di cantare" - Louis Armstrong, Lara Saint Paul
(Vincenzo Buonassisi, Giorgio Bertero, Marino Marini, Aldo Valleroni)
13
"La voce del silenzio" - Tony Del Monaco, Dionne Warwick
(Paolo Limiti, Mogol, Elio Isola)
14
"Che vale per me" - Peppino Gagliardi, Eartha Kitt
(Marisa Terzi, Carlo Alberto Rossi)
Eliminated
"Il posto mio" - Tony Renis, Domenico Modugno
(Alberto Testa, Tony Renis))
Eliminated
"Il re d'Inghilterra" - Nino Ferrer, Pilade
(Nino Ferrer)
Eliminated
"La farfalla impazzita" - Johnny Dorelli, Paul Anka
(Mogol, Lucio Battisti)
Eliminated
"La vita" - Elio Gandolfi, Shirley Bassey
(Antonio Amurri, Bruno Canfora)
Eliminated
"Le opere di Bartolomeo" - The Rokes, The Cowsills
(Sergio Bardotti, Ruggero Cini)
Eliminated
"Le solite cose" - Pino Donaggio, Timi Yuro
(Vito Pallavicini, Pino Donaggio)
Eliminated
"No amore" - Giusy Romeo, Sacha Distel
(Vito Pallavicini, Paolo Conte, Mansueto Deponti, Enrico Intra)
Eliminated
"Per vivere" - Iva Zanicchi, Udo Jürgens
(Nisa, Umberto Bindi)
Eliminated
"Tu che non sorridi mai" - Orietta Berti, Piergiorgio Farina
(Marisa Terzi, Sauro Sili)
Eliminated

Broadcasts

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Local broadcast

[edit]

The final of the festival were broadcast on Programma Nazionale, while the semi-finals were broadcast on radio.

International broadcast

[edit]

Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators are shown in the tables below.

International broadcasters of the Sanremo Music Festival 1968
Country Broadcaster Channel(s) Commentator(s) Ref(s)
 Argentina Canal 9[a] [2]
 Czechoslovakia ČsR [cs; sk] Rádio Slovensko [sk][b] [3]

Notes

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  1. ^ Delayed five-part broadcast on 1, 8, 15, 22 and 29 March at 22:30 (ART)[2]
  2. ^ Delayed broadcast on 10 March 1968 at 15:20 CEST[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Eddy Anselmi. Festival di Sanremo: almanacco illustrato della canzone italiana. Panini Comics, 2009. ISBN 8863462291.
  2. ^ a b "San Remo a la argentina" [San Remo, the Argentine way]. Crónica (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina. 27 February 1967. p. 24. Retrieved 1 October 2024 – via Internet Archive.
  3. ^ a b "neděle – 10. března 1968" [Sunday – 10 March 1968]. Rozhlasový týdeník (in Czech). No. 10. 21 May 1984. pp. 14–15. Retrieved 27 September 2024 – via Kramerius [cs].