
Treccani enshrines Giuni Russo's 'Un'estate al mare' as Italy's eternal summer hit, 44 years on
The Italian Encyclopedia Institute adds the late singer to its biographical dictionary of women, celebrating the 1982 song that still defines the Italian summer, while today's streaming landscape fragments the once-unified hit parade.
Treccani's tribute
The Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana Treccani has added Giuni Russo to its Dizionario biografico e tematico delle donne in Italia, calling the Palermo-born singer the unforgettable interpreter of Italy's eternal summer hit. The entry celebrates Un'estate al mare, the 1982 song written with Franco Battiato that has returned every summer for 44 years as a shared national soundtrack. Treccani describes the track as a plastic example of how pop culture can become historical memory.
Apparentemente leggera, con una melodia semplice e immediatamente riconoscibile la canzone nasconde un testo tutt'altro che banale, ricco di immagini evocative, perfettamente in linea con il gusto citazionistico di Battiato.
The song that defined summers
Released in the summer of 1982, the year Italy won the World Cup in Spain, Un'estate al mare entered the top ten on 7 August and stayed there until November. It won the Festivalbar competition and earned a Disco d'oro, becoming the undisputed anthem of Italian beaches from Rimini to Mondello. The song's apparent lightness hides a layered text full of poetic references, while the playful "-oni oni" suffix of ombrelloni and Russo's seagull-like vocal acrobatics on the highest notes made it instantly recognisable.
A voice of five octaves
Born Giuseppa Romeo on 7 September 1951, Russo won the Castrocaro festival as a teenager with A chi by Fausto Leali, securing a contract with EMI and a spot at the 1968 Sanremo Festival. Her vocal range exceeded five octaves, allowing her to move naturally across pop, classical, ethnic, electronic and jazz. The artistic meeting with Battiato at the start of the 1980s proved decisive: their 1981 album Energie and the following year's single propelled her to national fame. Later albums such as Vox, Mediterranea, Giuni and Album confirmed her experimental drive, though tensions with label CGD grew over its push for lighter, more commercial material.
- Born in Palermo as Giuseppa Romeo
- Participates in the Sanremo Music Festival after winning Castrocaro
- First collaboration with Franco Battiato on the album Energie
- Releases the single that will become Italy's defining summer anthem
- Enters the Italian top ten, where it remains until November
- Wins the Festivalbar competition and earns a Disco d'oro
- Returns to the Sanremo stage with Morirò d'amore
- Dies after a long illness
The fragmented summer of 2026
Forty-four years on, the Italian summer hit landscape has splintered. Streaming platforms, TikTok-driven micro-trends and algorithmic playlists have erased the idea of a single, universally shared song. La Stampa notes that for at least three seasons there has been no undisputed king of the summer. This year's contenders include Al mio paese by Serena Brancale, Levante and Leda, an anthem for students living away from home; Buon vento by Alfa and Jovanotti; and Bossa nostra by Gaia. The old-style tormentone has given way to a mosaic of tracks competing for distinct audience niches, a summer soundtrack without, as Battiato might say, a permanent centre of gravity.


