- Source: Fischia il vento
"Fischia il vento" ("The Wind Whistles") is an Italian popular song whose text was written in late 1943, at the inception of the Resistance. The tune is based on the Russian song "Katyusha". Along with "Bella ciao" it is one of the most famous songs celebrating the Italian resistance, the anti-fascist movement that fought the forces that occupied Italy during World War II.
History
The song was broadcast after 8 September 1943 between the high valley of Andora - Stellanello in Passu du Beu behind the Pizzo d'Evigno and afterwards above Curenna, in the "Casone dei Crovi", in the high Valley of Albenga, where the partisan squad led by Felice Cascione took refuge. During that period there were still no partisan songs; therefore, people sang old communist and socialist songs: L'Internazionale, La guardia rossa, Bandiera rossa or the song of anarchic origin Addio Lugano Bella, transformed into Addio Imperia Bella, Vieni o maggio (o Canzone del maggio), on the melody of "Nabucco".
Giacomo Sibilla, battle name Ivan, survivor of the campaign of Russia, joined the partisan squad led by Felice Cascione, where he was added into the 2nd Regiment Genio Pontieri. In the region of Don, Ivan had known Russian prisoners and women, and from them he learned the song Katyusha. Ivan brought it with him to Italy, and in the Passu du Beu he sketched a few verses together with Vittorio Rubicone, Vittorio il Biondo. Then the commander Cascione intervened. Together with Silvano Alterisio, battle name Vassili, and other comrades the verses written by Felice some time prior were adapted to the Russian melody. Recently the "casone" where u Megu and his comrades began writing the famous song was rediscovered. The composition was terminated in the Casone dei Crovi, a location not too distant from the Monte Peso Grande, occupied by partisans in the beginning of the winter of 1943.
= Debut
=The song was sung for the first time in Curenna, fraction of Vendone, in Christmas 1943, but it was broadcast officially in Alto, in the square in front of the church, the day of Epiphany 1944. Three weeks after Felice Cascione was killed in battle by nazifascists, and his squad carried his name from that moment on. Right after, this partisan nucleus got larger, and even the twenty-year-old Italo Calvino, living in Sanremo, joined that group with the battle name Santiago, since he was born in Cuba in Santiago de las Vegas. Afterwards Fischia il Vento officially became the anthem of the Brigate Partigiane Garibaldi.
In the original lyrics the verse "eppur bisogna andar" ("but we must march on") was actually "eppur bisogna ardir" ("but we must dare"), as documented in the book by Giorgio Pagano, with the title taken from the original verse.
Sample lyrics
Recordings
1965 Milva on the album Canti della libertà
1993 Modena City Ramblers on the album Combat Folk
1995 Skiantos on the VV. AA. album compilation Materiale Resistante 1945-1995 and reprinted on their 2004 album Rarities
2003 Banda Bassotti on the album Así es mi vida
2009 P38Punk on the album Fischia il vento (singolo)
2010 Talco on the album 10 Years
2013 Kenobit on the album Kenobit
2013 NH3
2016 Greta Olm
In Films
The song was featured in the 2003 Italian film Buongiorno, Notte, in which several characters involved in the resistance movement sang it at a celebratory event.
The song and music appeared in the 2023 mini-series The Lying Life of Adults (TV series), where it is associated with Neapolitan communists.
See also
Bella ciao – another Italian partisan song
Bandiera Rossa – another Italian revolutionary song
Siamo i ribelli della montagna – another Italian partisan song
Zog nit keyn mol - A Yiddish partisan song popularized during WW2
References
External links
Fischia il vento from Canzoniere ANPI (in Italian)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Fischia il vento
- Bella ciao
- Katyusha (song)
- Il Canto degli Italiani
- Three Arrows
- Bandiera Rossa
- Il manifesto
- Italian road to socialism
- Iron Front
- Red Brigades