You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Italian. (October 2023)Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
John Foster | |
---|---|
Born | Paolo Occhipinti 23 August 1939 (age 84) Milan, Italy |
Occupation | Singer |
Paolo Occhipinti (born 23 August 1939), best known as John Foster, is an Italian former singer and journalist.
Born in Milan, Occhipinti had already a professional career as a musical critic and a journalist when he started singing in an amateur band. [1] [2] Put under contract by the label Phonocolor in the late 1950s, he adopted the stage name John Foster. He initially specialized in cover versions of American songs, in particularly from the repertoire of Ray Charles. [2]
Foster got his first hit in 1963, with the song "Eri un'abitudine" (Can't Get Used to Losing You), which ranked #5 on the Italian hit parade. [1] [3] Foster's major hit was "Amore scusami", his entry to the 1964 Un disco per l'estate competition; the single peaked third on the Italian charts and was subsequently covered by dozens of artists, including Rita Pavone, Dalida, Robert Goulet and Jerry Vale (with the title "My Love, Forgive Me"). [1] [3]
In 1965 and in 1966 Foster entered the main competition at the Sanremo Music Festival with the songs "Cominciamo ad amarci" and "Se questo ballo non finisse mai". In the late 1960s, he left the music industry and resumed his work as a journalist. Between 1976 and 2005 he was the editor of the weekly magazine Oggi . [1] [2]
Nicola Di Bari is an Italian singer-songwriter and actor. He is considered one of the "sacred monsters" of Italian pop music.
Jimmy Fontana was an Italian actor, composer and singer-songwriter. Two of his most famous songs are "Che sarà", performed also by José Feliciano with Ricchi e Poveri, and "Il Mondo".
Miranda Martino is an Italian singer and actress.
Rosario Umberto Balsamo, best known as Umberto Balsamo is an Italian singer-songwriter and composer.
Gianfranco Michele Maisano, best known as Michele is an Italian singer and actor.
Piero Focaccia is an Italian pop singer and film actor.
Nino Buonocore is an Italian singer-songwriter, best known for the songs "Rosanna" and "Scrivimi".
Corrado Lojacono was an Italian singer, actor, record producer and songwriter.
Fausto Cigliano was an Italian singer, guitarist, and actor.
Aldo Donati was an Italian singer, composer and television personality.
Sandro Giacobbe is an Italian singer-songwriter.
Nicola Arigliano was an Italian jazz singer, musician, and occasional actor. Born in Squinzano, Province of Lecce, at young age he ran away from home because of the humiliations received even by family members due to his stuttering and moved to Turin, where he was hosted by fellow immigrants. He later moved to Milan and later to Rome, where he held several jobs.
I Profeti were an Italian pop group, mainly successful in the late sixties and in the seventies.
Francesco Baccini is an Italian singer-songwriter.
Remo Germani, the stage name of Remo Speroni, was an Italian singer and occasional actor, mainly successful in the 1960s.
Bruno Filippini is an Italian singer, mainly successful in the 1960s.
Luigi Albertelli was an Italian songwriter and television author.
Riccardo Maiocchi, best known as Riki Maiocchi, was an Italian singer and musician, mainly successful in the second half of the 1960s.
Mario Castelnuovo is an Italian singer-songwriter and composer.
Gloria Christian is an Italian Canzone Napoletana singer, mainly successful between the second half of the 1950s and the 1960s.