Salvatore Adamo

Known for his ballads sung in a soft, slightly veiled voice, Salvatore Adamo has spanned the decades with a timeless style. Born in Cosimo, Sicily, on November 1, 1943, he grew up in Belgium, where his parents settled four years later. Noticed at a radio contest in 1959, he obtained a recording contract and scored an immediate hit with "Sans toi ma vie". At the height of the yéyé period, his gentle, suave voice stood out from the pop hits and rock rhythms, with songs that became classics such as "Les Filles du bord de mer", "Tombe la neige", "Ma main sur tes hanches" and "Vous permettez monsieur? Having become a star in France, Belgium and Germany thanks to the German versions of his hits, Adamo, as he was then known, was known as far away as Japan, where his concerts were sold out. Although he continued to record in the 1970s, without selling as many records as in the previous decade, the Italian-Belgian singer made an unexpected comeback in the 2000s with the help of new songwriters for the albums Zanzibar (2003), La Part de l'Ange (2007) and De Toi à Moi (2010). He then reverted to his full name Salvatore Adamo and enriched his repertoire with regular releases, as evidenced by the albums La Grande Roue (2012), the tribute Adamo Chante Bécaud (2014), L'Amour N'a Jamais Tort (2016) or Si Vous Saviez... (2018). In 2023, he adapted English pop and rock hits in In French Please! After vocal cord problems, Salvatore Adamo returned to the stage and recorded the album Des Nèfles et des Groseilles. .., released in 2025.

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