Amandoti


"Amandoti" – in its full album title "«Amandoti» ", i.e. Loving You' " – is a song by Italian punk band CCCP - Fedeli alla linea, written by its members Massimo Zamboni and Giovanni Lindo Ferretti. The band's final single, it was released for radio airplay only through Virgin Dischi in 1990, and was included in the album Epica Etica Etnica Pathos from the same year.
Widely regarded as CCCP's most popular track, "Amandoti" was brought to mainstream success by Gianna Nannini in 2004 and has since been covered by numerous other artists, with the band's version being re-issued via Universal Music Italy in 2014.

Background

Inspired by the death of CCCP leader Giovanni Lindo Ferretti's grandmother, the lyrics of "Amandoti" were written in his Emilian hometown of Cerreto Alpi. They describe love as a physically exhausting endeavour, yet a feeling one is never ready to give up – pushing the singer to beg that their loved one never leave.
The song was first performed at a 1987 live show by the group's female singer Annarella Giudici, and it was only three years later that Ferretti recorded his version to be included in Epica Etica Etnica Pathos.

Personnel

Gianna Nannini version

In 2004, Italian rock singer Gianna Nannini chose to cover "Amandoti" on her album Perle, with her rendition intended as an address to a lover rather than a relative. It was with this version, arranged in a more classical rock style than the original, that the song achieved mainstream popularity, becoming much more commonly associated with Nannini than CCCP themselves.

Other versions

Since Nannini's version, "Amandoti" has been covered on several occasions, particularly in televised performances, by other artists. Notable covers include:

Settembre version

In late 2023, X Factor contestant Andrea Settembre covered "Amandoti" for one of the show's episodes, in a version with Neapolitan-language lyrics by himself replacing some of the lines. His performance was well received, and he opted to release it as a single the following February.
Settembre's version of "Amandoti" soon appeared among the top 200 tracks streamed on both Apple Music and Spotify in Italy, and was included in the soundtrack for the 2024 Netflix series Deceitful Love.