Tata Giacobetti
Tata Giacobetti | |
---|---|
Born | 24 June 1922 |
Died | 2 December 1988[1] Rome, Italy[1] | (aged 66)
Occupation | Singer-songwriter |
Spouse |
Giovanni "Tata" Giacobetti (24 June 1922 – 2 December 1988) was an Italian singer and jazz musician. He is mostly known for being a member of the vocal quartet Quartetto Cetra.
Biography
[edit]Giacobetti was a self-taught musician. He learned to play bass and piano. He started singing at students' parties when he studied scenography at Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma. In 1940–41 he co-founded a vocal quartet called Quartetto Egie, which changed line-up and name twice, becoming Quartetto Ritmo first and then Quartetto Cetra.[2]
As part of Quartetto Cetra, Giacobetti's show business career lasted for over forty years. He was singer and actor for radio, stage, TV, cinema and advertising.
Besides singing, he was the group's main lyricist, often writing together with Virgilio Savona, who composed the music. Their collaboration resulted in hundreds of songs which went to form Quartetto Cetra's vast repertoire.
Tata Giacobetti also wrote lyrics for other Italian musicians, including Gorni Kramer, Giovanni D'Anzi, and Armando Trovajoli.
In 1964 Giacobetti married Valeria Fabrizi, an Italian actress, singer and television personality. They had a daughter Giorgia Giacobetti.[1]
Giacobetti passed away in December 1988, a few months after Quartetto Cetra's final performance in Bologna.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d MUORE TATA GIACOBETTI. la Repubblica. 3 December 1988
- ^ Matteo Ceschi (2009). Singing What We Were to Know What We Are:The Quartetto Cetra and National History in Italian TV Entertainment. Archivio Savona-Mannucci
External links
[edit]- 1922 births
- 1988 deaths
- Singers from Rome
- Italian male songwriters
- Italian lyricists
- 20th-century Italian male singers
- 20th-century Italian songwriters
- Italian jazz guitarists
- Italian jazz singers
- Quartetto Egie members
- Quartetto Ritmo members
- Quartetto Cetra members
- Italian bass guitarists
- Burials at Campo Verano