Italian singer-songwriter Gino Paoli dies at 91

Published 25 Mar, 2026 10:52am 1 min read

Gino Paoli, the singer‑songwriter who helped reshape Italian popular music in the 1960s with ​poetic, introspective songs such as “Il cielo in una ‌stanza” (The sky in a room) and “Sapore di sale” (The taste of salt), has died at 91, his family said on ​Tuesday.

Paoli was a central figure in a school ​of songwriters from the northern Italian city ⁠of Genoa, alongside Fabrizio De Andre and Luigi ​Tenco, who brought literary ambition and emotional realism to ​Italian pop music in the post‑war era.

In a career spanning more than six decades, Paoli remained an influential presence in ​Italian music well into old age, with many ​of his enduring songs recorded by other artists, including Ornella Vanoni, with ‌whom ⁠he had an intense love affair.

Known for his understated delivery and reflective lyrics, among the best-loved numbers he performed himself were “Quattro Amici” (Four Friends) and “La Gatta” (The ​cat).

Prone to depression, ​in 1963, ⁠shortly after writing “Sapore di sale,” Paoli shot himself in the chest, but the ​suicide attempt failed, and the bullet lodged ​in ⁠the pericardium membrane that surrounds the heart.

“I wasn’t enjoying myself anymore,” he said in a 2022 interview ⁠with the daily ​Corriere della Sera. “Seeing as I ​enjoyed myself a lot afterwards, it’s a good thing that it ​went wrong.”

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