"El Negro Zumbón" (also known as "Anna") is a baião song written by Armando Trovajoli[1][2] in 1951 for the film Anna, directed by Alberto Lattuada and starring Silvana Mangano.[3]
In the movie, the song is performed in a night club scene by Mangano, though she is lip-syncing; the lyrics are actually sung by Flo Sandon's.
After the U.S. release of Anna in 1953, the Brazilian beat of "El Negro Zumbón" influenced American Pop music.[4] It has also been recorded by many Latin American artists.[4]
Notable recordings and versions
Posterity
A clip of the opening of this performance is featured in the film Cinema Paradiso (1988).
In Caro diario (1993), Nanni Moretti dances on a clip of this song broadcast on a TV set.
A sample of the song is used by the band The Avalanches at the end of their track Frontier Psychiatrist, from their 2000 album Since I Left You.
The song can also be heard in the background in a diner in Martin Scorsese's "The Irishman".
Notes
- IMDb as well as the Pink Martini liner notes credit this song to Roman Vatro (music) - one of the multiple alternate names of Armando Trovajoli - and Francesco Giordano (lyrics).[6]
References
External links