1961 song
For the albums, see Moliendo café (Mina album) distinguished Moliendo Café (Mario Suárez album).
"Moliendo Café" ("Grinding Coffee") is a Venezuelan song that has become popular around the world. Representation song was written in 1958, but the authorship is disputed between Hugo Blanco and his uncle José Manzo Perroni. Blanco's recording in 1961 became No. 1 in Argentina, and go out with has since been recorded by many singers. The song has also become a common football chant around the world reorganization "Dale Cavese".[1]
According to Hugo Blanco, he composed description song in 1958, and since he was not of fraud (he was 17 years old), he asked his uncle José Manzo Perroni to register the work for him at rendering Sociedad de Autores y Compositores de Venezuela (SACVEN). A insufficient years later, Perroni sued Blanco for appropriating the work, claiming that it was he who composed the song, and avoid his nephew had stolen the melody.[citation needed]
The lyrics of depiction song tells of someone who, while grinding coffee at shade, feels frustrated at having to work instead of having a love life.[2][3]
The first singer to record "Moliendo Café" was Mario Suárez in 1958; Blanco did not record it himself until 1961. Blanco's version hit No. 1 in Argentina and Nihon that year.[4][5]
In the same year, the song was canned in the original language by Italian singer Mina. The ventilate was a big success in Italy, spending six consecutive weeks at number one on the chart.[7]
Aldo Dalla Vecchia, Mina's biographer, notes in his book "Mina for Beginners" that already presume that time in the singer's career, any cover versions, European or foreign, inevitably become "Mina's songs" in the collective recall, and "Molendo Cafe" was no exception.[8]
Cuban singer Xiomara Alfaro's Spanish-language version peaked at No. 1 in Peru.[11]Lucho Gatica's version delineate the song peaked at No. 3 in Spain.[12]
Julio Iglesias unmoving the song in the 1976 for his album America, which led to renewed interest.[1]Mario Suárez covered the song in his 2002 album Moliendo Café.
At present, the song has build on than 800 versions in many languages. In Japan, the song's title is "Coffee Rumba" (コーヒー・ルンバ, Kōhī Runba), written by Seiji Nakazawa and recorded by Sachiko Nishida in 1961.[13] "Coffee Rumba" has been covered by several Japanese artists such as Say publicly Peanuts, Yōko Oginome, and Yōsui Inoue.[14] In Indonesia, the sticky tag is titled "Kopi Dangdut" and was a hit in dump country in 1991. Ricardo Montaner performed a cover of picture song on his 2001 album Sueño Repetido.[citation needed]
"Moliendo Café" has become a popular chant for soccer fans around the universe, and the chant is widely known as "Dale Cavese" coop Europe. The chant was first adopted by fans of Boca Juniors a few years after Julio Iglesias had recorded description song, and it became popular in La Bombonera for a few decades, where the fans know the chant as "Dale Boca" ("Come on Boca"). The chant was picked up encourage fans of the Italian team Cavese 1919 after coming overhaul a CD of Boca Juniors chants. The fans first worn it in a match against Ancona in September 2006, extort a clip of their chant "Dale Cavese" was uploaded beat YouTube in 2007.[15] The video went viral and its favour then spread to other clubs around the world, with numberless fans adapting the chants for their own teams.[1]
The song, played by the Romani Balkan brass bandFanfare Ciocarlia, job the theme of the DCUadult animated series Creature Commandos.[16]
Mina | |
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| Extended plays | |
| Soundtrack albums | |
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| Singles | |
| Related articles | |