Andrea Bocelli’s Sanremo SHOCKER: The 1995 Performance That Lost the Contest but WON the World—How One Song Changed Music History and Silenced Every Doubter in the Room

In 1995, Andrea Bocelli took a risk that would redefine classical music forever. With nothing but raw passion and a haunting melody, he stepped onto the Sanremo stage and sang “Con te partirò”—a song that didn’t win first place, but won hearts across the globe. Why did a fourth-place finish spark a worldwide phenomenon? And how did this single moment launch one of the most legendary careers in vocal music history? What Bocelli did that night left the judges stunned—and the world forever changed.

Don’t miss the performance that shook the music world to its core—watch the unforgettable moment below.

Andrea Bocelli’s voice was first heard by the world in 1995 when he competed in a singing competition.

Andrea Bocelli is to “Time to Say Goodbye” what Pavarotti is to “Nessun dorma.”

Although the well-known Italian singer’s signature song had modest beginnings, it hinted at the beauty that would eventually unfold.

Andrea Bocelli: The spectacular first time he sang Con te Partiro before he was famous | Music | Entertainment | Express.co.uk

Before the song went international and became ‘Time to Say Goodbye’ – and before Bocelli met Sarah Brightman – the tenor sang ‘Con te partirò’ for the first time on stage, in a 1995 televised competition.

While the song eventually went on to define his career, when he was first offered it, Bocelli had serious doubts.

He said: “When it arrived at my house, the song was a candidate for the festival of Sanremo which I would soon participate in.

“I said, ‘This song is not good because the festival is a competition. And this is not a song for a competition. It’s a deep song. A timeless song. But it’s not for a competition’.”

And Bocelli’s instincts were spot-on. “In fact, when I gave in, we brought the song to Sanremo and we only made it to fourth place.”

But, he says, “After that, it went through the journey everyone knows.”

Bocelli recorded it for his self-titled album of the same year, and the single topped the charts in France and Belgium, breaking all-time records in both countries.

 

 

 

 

 

Hear a young Andrea Bocelli sing 'Con te partirò' – as the world heard his voice... - Classic FM

 

 

 

 

By the beginning of 1996, the song was rapidly gaining steam. British soprano Sarah Brightman heard it and persuaded Bocelli to sing it as a duet with her with some English lyrics added, to open the farewell fight of German boxer Henry Maske on November 23, 1996.

Its memorably soaring chorus, melded with orchestral sounds and a now-iconic blend of Italian and English, made ‘Time to Say Goodbye’ the defining classical-pop hit.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The song was written by the Italian Rockstar Zucchero, who first crossed paths with Bocelli in 1992 when he held auditions for tenors to make a demo tape of his song ‘Miserere’, which had been intended for Luciano Pavarotti.

When Pavarotti heard the young tenor singing on the demo, he urged Zucchero to use Bocelli instead of him. Finally, on Zucchero’s persuasion, the three stars recorded the song as a trio.

Soon after, Bocelli won a recording contract. He also won the preliminary round of the Sanremo festival, taking home the highest marks ever recorded in the newcomers section.

The following year, he entered the festival and finished top of the section again, with another record score. After his two-fold success, Sanremo invited him back for their main competition.

It was then, in 1995, that he sang ‘Con te partiro’ and captured the world’s imagination with his effortlessly high vocals and ringing vibrato, brimming with sensitivity.

“If God would have a singing voice, he must sound a lot like Andrea Bocelli,” his ‘The Prayer’ duet partner, Celine Dion, once famously said.

And for Bocelli himself, the finding of his signature song was a moment of unsullied joy. “It obviously brought confidence, optimism, general euphoria. For me and also everyone who worked with me.”