Early life Domenica Rita Adriana Bertè was born in
Bagnara Calabra,
Reggio Calabria, in
southern Italy, on 20 September 1947, the second of four daughters: the oldest, Leda (born 1946),
Loredana (born 1950) and the youngest Olivia (born 1958). Her father, Giuseppe Radames Bertè (1921–2017), was a teacher of Latin and Greek; born in
Villa San Giovanni, he moved to
Marche with his family, first working as a professor and later becoming high school headmaster in
Ancona. Her mother, Maria Salvina Dato (1925–2003), born in Bagnara Calabra, was an elementary school teacher. Bertè, nicknamed "Mimì", spent her childhood in
Porto Recanati, Marche, where she showed an early interest in music. She began to perform at parties and dance halls and entered some song contests for new voices. In 1962, she convinced her mother to take her to
Milan for an audition, with the hope of getting a record deal.
The beginnings as Mimì Bertè The only one willing to put her to the test was the author and music producer
Carlo Alberto Rossi, who decided to launch her as a
yé-yé girl, following the musical fashion of the moment. With the song "Ombrello blu", she participated in the Pesaro Festival. In 1963, the 16-year-old Mimì Bertè recorded her first song. In May 1964, she won the Bellaria Festival, with the song "Come puoi farlo tu", but it was with the song "Il magone" that she reached some media exposure and also with the song "Ed ora che abbiamo litigato", performed in 1965 at the variety show Teatro 10. The numerous auditions made by Mimì Bertè in that period, in anticipation of an album, however, remained unreleased for almost thirty years: Carlo Alberto Rossi, hoping for her musical growth, pushed her to sign with a bigger record label,
Durium, which in 1966 published her record
Non sarà tardi / Quattro settimane, without, however, any success. After her parents split, she moved to Rome with her mother and sisters, where she tried to emerge again by forming a trio together with her sister Loredana and her friend Renato Fiacchini (known as
Renato Zero), also earning a living with a modest job at the union of singers and songwriters. In 1969, she served four months in prison in Tempio Pausania for having been discovered in possession of a marijuana cigarette during an evening in a well-known nightclub in Sardinia, a crime that at the time did not make any distinction between the possession of soft drugs vs hard drugs, and therefore was strictly prosecutable. The singer was acquitted after a stint in prison, during which she attempted suicide. Consequently, the publication of her record ''Coriandoli spenti / L'argomento dell'amore'' was blocked, and the album, recorded a few months earlier for Esse Records, remained unreleased for over thirty years (today it is one of the rarest records in Italy). In 1970, she participated as a chorister, with her sister Loredana and alongside the musical group ″Cantori Moderni di Alessandroni″, to the album
Per un pugno di samba, recorded during his stay in Rome by
Chico Buarque de Hollanda, whom the singer will always be a great admirer. In the same year, the pianist Toto Torquati convinced Mimì to perform live, playing for her in a repertoire more appropriate to her voice.
1970s Success as Mia Martini A meeting with lawyer and music producer Alberigo Crocetta proved decisive. Crocetta was the founder of the famous Piper Club, where many famous artists used to perform. He decided to launch Mimì Bertè, thinking also about the international music market and therefore creating her stage name "Mia Martini":
Mia like
Mia Farrow (her favourite actress), and
Martini, chosen among three of the most famous Italian words abroad (spaghetti, pizza and
Martini). Her look became more eclectic, characterised by numerous rings and a peculiar bowler hat. In 1971, the record company
RCA Italiana released "Padre davvero", the first song released as Mia Martini and recorded with the band La Macchina. The lyrics by Antonello De Sanctis deal with a generational conflict between a father and a daughter, and were immediately judged "irreverent" by radio and television censorship. Nevertheless, she won at the ''Festival di Musica d'Avanguardia e Nuove Tendenze'' in Viareggio. Another song of the album is "Amore.. amore.. un corno", a track written by a young
Claudio Baglioni and
Antonio Coggio. Baglioni wrote also "Gesù è mio fratello" and "Lacrime di marzo" for Martini's LP record
Oltre la collina. "The important thing is to put memories behind you. I did it with a record, titled
Oltre la collina in which I practically put all of myself, all my past. In the song "Padre davvero" there is also my father, who left home one day, twenty years ago, and whom we have not seen since then. I accidentally learned that he lives in Milan and teaches in a high school. There is also my experience with the hippies in Ibiza, Spain and Kathmandu, Nepal, in the East. An adventurous, unpredictable, especially painful life." (center), Vena Veroutis (right) and the band Tin-Tin, in the variety show
Stasera Little Tony (January 1972) The album (the singer's first), released in November 1971, is considered one of the best works ever made by an Italian female artist, as well as one of her best works.
Oltre la collina is also one of the first Italian
concept albums, addressing young despair and loneliness, religion, illness and suicide. Martini's success was immediate. She appeared on several television broadcasts, and the single reached the top positions of the hit parade and earned Martini her first Gold Record in sales. In September, Martini also participated for the first time in the
Mostra Internazionale di Musica Leggera in Venice with "
Donna sola", a song with strong soul influences. The track was the most successful single of the event, with approximately 270,000 copies sold. The following year, Martini won the prestigious Gondola D'Oro. "Donna sola" reached the 2º place in the hit-parade of the best-selling singles during the month of November. In October Martini released her second album,
Nel mondo, una cosa which contained songs such as "Valsinha" by
Vinícius de Moraes and
Chico Buarque, "Amanti" by
Maurizio Fabrizio, and the poignant covers "Madre" and "Io straniera", two pieces respectively by
John Lennon and
Elton John. The album reached the top of the charts with around 300,000 copies sold and received the Record Critics Award as the best LP of 1972. At the beginning of 1973, Martini's hits "Piccolo uomo" and "Donna sola" were released in Germany. She appeared on television shows in European countries including France and Spain, and she was called by critics "the queen of youth music in Italy". The record label
Ricordi proposed to Martini to perform at
Sanremo Music Festival with the track "Vado via". She at first accepted, and then renounced in extremis, decreeing the fortune of
Drupi, who had sung the audition of the song and he is invited to compete at Sanremo festival. On 2 April Mia Martini records "
Minuetto", composed by
Dario Baldan Bembo, with lyrics by
Franco Califano. The lyrics of "Minuetto" were written after attempts made by Maurizio Piccoli and
Bruno Lauzi, who had tried in vain to make a convincing draft, and ultimately contacted
Franco Califano. Baldan Bembo wrote the score, in which different musical atmospheres can be identified: from the classical citations of Bach to pop ballads from overseas. In the recording room for the choir, there are
Bruno Lauzi,
Maurizio Fabrizio, the band
La Bionda,
Loredana Bertè and
Adriano Panatta (at the time in a relationship). With "Minuetto", her best-selling song, Martini earned another Gold Record and a platinum record, as well as the victory at
Festivalbar, her second victory in a row at the competition. The record remained in the top ten of the best-selling singles for 22 straight weeks, reaching the first position, and making it one of the most successful singles of 1973. In September, Martini again participated in the
Mostra Internazionale di Musica Leggera in Venice, performing "Bolero" and "Il guerriero", two songs initially intended for her sister Loredana, who, however, sees fading the possibility of signing a recording deal with the label Ricordi, at first interested in the young starlet and "Mia Martini's sister". The release of this record with the tracks "Bolero" and "Il guerriero" was scheduled by October, but the record would never be released, probably due to a change of rules implemented by
Gianni Ravera: in Venice it is no longer possible to compete with a single, but only with the entire LP. The singer therefore presented her new album, entitled
Il giorno dopo, and will collect the Gondola d'Oro, won the year before with "Donna sola". In addition to the two songs presented in Venice, the new LP contains, among others the track "Ma quale amore", written by
Antonello Venditti and
Franca Evangelisti, "La malattia", on the then-unusual and much censored subject of drug addiction, and "Dove il cielo va a finire", written by
Maurizio Fabrizio. At the end of 1973, she became the female singer to have sold the most records throughout the year, along with
Ornella Vanoni and Patty Pravo. During this time, an appearance on the TV show
Canzonissima with the song "Adesso vai" was scheduled, but this track was recorded by
Dori Ghezzi the following year.
Her European success (1974–1975) In 1974, Martini was considered by European critics the singer of the year. Her records were released in various countries of the world: she recorded her successes in French, German and Spanish. In 1976, the singer was once again convinced to participate in the Sanremo Festival with the song "L'amore è il mio orizzonte", but changed her mind again in extremis. In the month of March, the song was released without full promotion. It was her last official track with Ricordi, almost simultaneously released with the music compilation album
Mia. Later, the record company
RCA, the Roman label that had launched her career five years earlier, proposed a contract to Martini that gave more freedom to choose her repertoire. Martini, whose tensions with her label had worsened and who had been considering a change of label for some time, withdrew early from her contract with Ricordi. The move to RCA saw Mia Martini as the leading artist of the satellite label
Come Il Vento. The new album ''Che vuoi che sia... se t'ho aspettato tanto'' included the track "Se mi sfiori", written by the newcomer
Mango, the title-track "Io donna, io persona" and the song "Preghiera", written by
Stefano Rosso, whose arrangements are composed by
Luis Bacalov. For the launch of the album, the national TV Rai produced a special in colour with the same nam,e directed by Ruggero Miti, and broadcast an exclusive concert on the radio. In the summer, Martini performed on Italian and international stages, including Viareggio's Bussola and Sporting Club in Montecarlo. Furthermore, with "Che vuoi che sia... se t'ho aspettato tanto", she performed again at
Festivalbar and at the Mostra Internazionale di Musica Leggera in Venezia, presenting herself with an elaborate look: silver hairspray, royal makeup, and a sophisticated long red dress with a gold pattern. The year ended with the live recording of a special for French television in November and with her collaboration with
Sergio Endrigo. In the meantime, however, Martini was sued in court by the record label Ricordi for breach of contract. The record company requests and obtains not only the withdrawal from the market of her new LP (which was temporary), but also and above all the seizure of all the artist's assets and earnings, as well as the payment of a high penalty, for the amount of almost 90 million lire of the time.
Success at the Olympia with Aznavour and encounter with Fossati (1977–1979) In a TV concert broadcast in France, Martini captured the attention of
Charles Aznavour, who was struck by the intensity of her interpretative style. The French singer-songwriter asked her to join him for a duo show to perform in different theatres in Europe, starting at
Teatro Sistina in Rome. In 1977, Martini was chosen to represent Italy at the
Eurovision Song Contest with "
Libera", a track recorded in different languages, finishing 13th out of 18. The original song was a ballad but was later revamped before the contest to give it a more disco-influenced feel. Martini stated in later interviews that she didn't like the new version of the track and wanted to sing the original version of the song. In the same year, she recorded one of her best-known interpretations, "Per amarti", written by
Bruno Lauzi and
Maurizio Fabrizio. She released the album with the same title
Per amarti, in which she worked for the first time with songwriter
Ivano Fossati, (who participates for the choirs of the song "Un uomo per me", cover of "
Somebody to Love" by Queen and writes the lyrics of "Se finisse qui", cover of "
Give a little bit" by
Supertramp), beginning an artistic partnership and a sentimental relationship. The album
Per amarti also included the track "Ritratto di donna", with which Martini participated at the
World Popular Song Festival in Tokyo in 1977, placing second and winning the Most Outstanding Performance Award (MOPA). On 10 January 1978, together with Aznavour, she debuted successfully at the
Olympia in Paris. However, after the month of reruns, Martini renounced the renewal of the contract to bring the recital to England, at the
Royal Albert Hall in London, to stay with her new lover, Fossati. For this reason, her plans to record an entire album with Aznavour faded. Her relationship with Fossati led Martini to choose only projects that interested her, regardless of potential prestige: "Over the years I ended up being identified with the type of a sophisticated singer for selected people, who sang at Olympia and who seemed to snub the audience that had given her success, to seek who knows what higher goals .. This is not true at all..." Meanwhile, Martini clashed with RCA, following strong quarrels due to the significant changes made to the text and arrangement of "Libera". The singer also said RCA was not committed to making the new LP that was destined for the British market, which was never completed. The following year, Martini publicly accused the label of having boycotted her work, limiting their distribution, and hindering her by creating a hostile environment. Martini thus moved to
Warner Bros. Records, the only record company willing to pay the artist's entire debt with RCA, following the anticipated breach of contract. In record time, the first single "Vola" (by Ivano Fossati) was recorded and released in July. "Vola" was the prelude to a second and much more important collaboration with
Fossati, which will be developed with the album
Danza,
1980s "I was too willing for the job, I always had people around who praised me not for who I am, but for what I could give them. The music industry is a terrifying environment and I decided to stay out of it, to stay behind the scenes for three years. I became disenchanted. I know what type of corruption is behind the facade of an artist and I don't want to be involved anymore. I will continue to sing, but just step by step. In the entertainment world, everyone tries to crush you, to tarnish your dignity. And, in the end, we are the one who are responsible in front of the public, personally. [...] Dishonest music businessmen forced me to sing with cheap sound systems to save money; they forced me to perform under the threat of a penalty. And so I ended up under the knife twice. After the surgery, for three months I could not even speak. I underwent surgery and the doctors kept my mouth opened with a steel device that hurt my entire palate. It was a very painful time."
From singer to songwriter In 1981, after a year of silence following two difficult surgeries at her vocal cords (which changed the sound of her voice in a more hoarse and less extended timbre), Martini decided to present herself as a songwriter and took on a more discreet and androgynous look, far from the eccentric one of the seventies. She released, with the label DDD, the album
Mimì: ten songs written by her and recorded in London and the US with arrangements by
Dick Halligan. Among the tracks were the song "Del mio amore" and the two singles "E ancora canto" and "Ti regalo un sorriso", with which she competed at the
Festivalbar in 1981. The album received favourable reception, despite difficulties and ostracism during radio and television promotion. Martini addressed this in various interviews: "After the release of my album, I had to perform at Saint Vincent, but Gianni Ravera didn't want me there. I had to make a television special that
RAI had assigned to me, but the official responsible for the program in the end denied it to me. A radio and television programmer, who is working on the realisation of a summer show for the network, has clearly told my record company that it is much better that I stay away from his crew, because I bring bad luck. Many thanks for this contribution to intelligence. But does this seem fair to you? At this point, I have also stopped hating them and stifling my anger and despairing." In 1982, Martini competed for the first time at
Sanremo Music Festival, where she sang a song written by Ivano Fossati, entitled "E non finisce mica il cielo". Despite not reaching the podium, she won the critics' prize, which was established specifically for her interpretation. After her death, the Critics award would be named in her memory
"Mia Martini" Critics award. The same year, she wrote
Quante volte, a soft-funk track with music and arrangement by
Shel Shapiro, producer of her new LP album
Quante volte... ho contato le stelle. It exceeded 70,000 copies sold. Initially, the single "Quante volte" was distributed in a few thousand copies, but after it became a hit, her record label DDD was quick to reissue it with a different cover. "Quante volte" also enters the German charts, and a German version was recorded, though it remains unpublished. The album
Quante volte contains other tracks written by Martini, like "Stelle" and "Bambolina" (released the year after as a single).
Withdrawal from the music scene In 1983, Martini left the music scene. A growing smear campaign, started ten years earlier, linked her presence to negative events and identified her as a person bringing bad luck. In the music industry, even her name was forbidden to be uttered. Martini said, years later, of this period of her life: "My life became impossible. Whatever I did was destined to have no response and I had all the doors shut in my face. There were people who were afraid of me, who, for example, refused to participate at shows and events in which I should have taken part too. I remember that a manager begged me not to participate in a festival, because no record company would have sent their artists if I was there. This had gone to an absurd level, so I decided to withdraw.". She said in an interview with the weekly magazine
Epoca: "I had the most bitter disappointment by
Gianni Boncompagni, a friend precisely. Once I was a guest at
Discoring, he was the director. As soon as I entered the studio I heard Boncompagni saying to the crew: guys, beware, from now on anything can happen, the microphones will blow, there will be a black out." She also explained how the infamous story, which profoundly marked her artistic career and her personal life, began: "It all started in 1970. Then I was beginning to have my first successes. Fausto Paddeu, a producer nicknamed 'Ciccio Piper' because he was often at the Piper Club (a famous disco club), offered me an exclusive contract for life. He was a totally unreliable type and I refused it. And after a few days, returning from a concert in Sicily, the van in which I was traveling with my band was involved in an accident. Two guys lost their lives. 'Ciccio Piper' immediately took the opportunity to stick the label of 'jinx' on me." In 1982 Martini told journalist Gianfranco Moriondo: "Among the first ones to say that I jinx, there were
Patty Pravo and
Fred Bongusto. Then it was the turn of
RAI, which began to stop airing my songs. Then the record companies, who rejected my songs.". Martini organised a farewell concert at the theatre Ciak in Milan, in which she records the album
Miei compagni di viaggio: She recalled the most important stages of her musical growth through the reinterpretations of authors dear to her, including
John Lennon,
Kate Bush,
Randy Newman,
Vinícius de Moraes,
Fabrizio De André,
Francesco De Gregori and
Luigi Tenco. To the choirs of "Big Yellow Taxi" by
Joni Mitchell, there are her sister
Loredana Bertè, her vocalist and friend Aida Cooper,
Cristiano De André and
Ivano Fossati. The concert ended with the song "Ed ora dico sul serio (...Non vorrei cantare più)" by
Chico Buarque. The following year, the record company DDD again attempted to revive Martini's career by trying to get her to participate in the
Sanremo Music Festival with "Spaccami il cuore", a track written by
Paolo Conte. The song, however, is discarded by the selection jury from entering the festival. Regarding this exclusion from the Sanremo Music Festival, in an interview on
Radio Kiss Kiss in 1995, Martini said: "I was rejected by the jury of the Festival and I was personally rejected by Red Ronnie, who decided that I was someone bringing bad luck, I was an outdated singer and that my song was very bad.". Martini's contract with DDD was dissolved a few months later with the publication of the single, destined for the Sanremo Festival and released in a few thousand copies. The B-side of the single was a track Martini wrote called "Lucy", which in the refrain uses an ancient rhyme from Bagnara Calabra (her native hometown): a prayer not to hate one another and not to move away. The track "
Spaccami il cuore", rejected at the Sanremo Festival in 1985, was later sung by
Miriam Makeba, with the title "Don't Break My Heart". Marginalised by the music sector and visibly tested also by the end of her relationship with Fossati, Martini retreated to the Umbrian countryside, renting a flat in the small village of Calvi dell'Umbria. To make up for the considerable economic problems caused by her debts from the disputes with her previous record labels, she continued to perform in small gigs in provincial towns.
Return to Sanremo In 1989, the music producer Gianni Sanjust, who in the 1970s had previously taken care of Martini's artistic career at the label Ricordi, brought her back to the music stage. The relaunch was planned at
Fonit Cetra, the only record label willing to offer Martini a contract. The project was entrusted to Lucio Salvini, one of Martini's producers in the 1970s. Sanjust retrieved an old song, written for her by
Bruno Lauzi and
Maurizio Fabrizio in 1972: "
Almeno tu nell'universo". The song was initially rejected to the contest, but due to the involvement of Alba Calia and Sandra Carraro (wife of the then Italian Minister of Tourism and Entertainment,
Franco Carraro), the song was admitted to compete at the
39th Sanremo Festival. Martini's performance brought her newfound success with the public and critics, winning the Critics Award for a second time. "For seven years I could no longer do my job, so I lived moments of great depression. And in that moment (at Sanremo), I felt "physically" this total embrace of the whole audience, I felt it right on the skin. And it was an unforgettable moment." After her success at the Sanremo Music Festival, Martini soon went on tour and recorded a new LP album, called
Martini Mia.... The album includes songs such as "Notturno", which over time became a classic, and "Donna", the last one written two years earlier by the Neapolitan singer-songwriter
Enzo Gragnaniello. After having witnessed a live performance by Martini in the darkest period of her career, Gragnaniello paid homage to her by writing a song that became one of the most famous Italian songs explicitly focused on the theme of physical and psychological violence against women. This started a collaboration with her that would last for a few years. In the summer of 1989, Martini sang "Donna" at
Festivalbar, where she was awarded the Gold Disc for the 100,000 copies her album sold. In the autumn, she won the
Targa Tenco as the best female interpreter of the year.
1990s New successes at Sanremo, Neapolitan song hit and Eurovision In 1990, Mia Martini competed again at
Sanremo Music Festival with the track "La nevicata del '56", winning the Critics Award for the third time. The song "La nevicata del '56" was included in the album
La mia razza, a work in which Martini ranges from melodic sound ("Un altro Atlantico", "Stringi di più", "Cercando il sole"), to ethnic rhythms ("Danza pagana", "Va' a Marechiaro") and Latin sound (
Chica chica bum by
Carmen Miranda). In the same year, she sang the duet "Stelle di stelle" with
Claudio Baglioni, two decades after their first collaboration. In 1991, Martini published "Mi basta solo che sia un amore", a compilation album of her best-known love songs, plus the unreleased track "Scrupoli", which became the theme song of the homonymous television program. In the same year, she held twelve concerts in which she re-proposed pieces from her own repertoire and from other songwriters in a jazz version ("Vola", "Pensieri e parole" by
Battisti, "Gente distratta" by
Pino Daniele and other classic songs). At the end of 1991, Martini collaborated with
Roberto Murolo in the duet "Cu' mme", written by
Enzo Gragnaniello, which became a hit. In 1992, she competed for the fourth time at the
Sanremo Music Festival with the song "Gli uomini non cambiano". Despite being the favourite for the win by the press, she was awarded second place, behind
Luca Barbarossa with the song "Portami a ballare". Her new album
Lacrime, released after the competition, achieved a gold record, also entering the German charts. For the album, Martini collaborated with a young
Biagio Antonacci on the song "Il fiume dei profumi", with
Mimmo Cavallo for the songs "Dio c'è" and "Il mio Oriente", with Enzo Gragnaniello for the song "Scenne l'argento" and with other songwriters. Her second-place finish at the Sanremo Festival allowed her to represent Italy again at the
Eurovision Song Contest, held in Sweden. She presented a song titled "
Rapsodia", which was included in the homonymous compilation
Rapsodia - Il meglio di Mia Martini, with her best-known songs in a remastered version, together with two live tracks recorded during the tour
Per aspera ad Astra. Also planned was the release of a home video of her tour, which would be published posthumously by her new record label
Polygram. In April 1992, Martini reconnected with her estranged sister
Loredana Bertè after almost ten years of silence; the two women had not spoken to each other since 1983. In May 1992, Martini competed at Eurovision with "Rapsodia", placing 4th. At first, she appeared in Swedish media press primarily for being "the sister-in-law of
Björn Borg", the former Swedish tennis player that Loredana Bertè had married. But after the competition, she received the praise of the Swedish public, appearing far from the temperament of her sister Loredana. Loredana had in the meantime severed her relationship with
Björn Borg, whom she married in 1989, and prepared to return as a singer-songwriter. Martini agreed to duet with her on the song "Stiamo come stiamo", at
Sanremo Music Festival in 1993. But the event did not convince the juries, in part due to the tensions between the two sisters during the days of the music festival.
Disagreement with her record company and last album Later, her record company
Polygram forced her to participate in the selection process for the
Sanremo Music Festival of 1994. The track was rejected, and Martini was not convinced by the song. The news aroused an uproar, and singer
Claudia Mori offered Martini to replace her in the competition. Martini declined the offer, which was not allowed under the regulations of the Sanremo Festival. In 1994, Martini moved to a new record company, RTI Music, with which she completed recording her new album started with the previous label, where the singer had some disagreements. The album, her last one, was titled
La musica che mi gira intorno, in which she reinterpreted songs by her favorite authors, who wrote those tracks "in a moment of great love, or great frailty": among them "Hotel Supramonte" and "Fiume Sand Creek" by
Fabrizio De André, "Mimì sarà" by
Francesco De Gregori, "Dillo alla luna" by
Vasco Rossi, "Tutto sbagliato baby" by
Eugenio and
Edoardo Bennato, "La musica che gira intorno" by
Ivano Fossati and the unreleased song "Viva l'amore" by
Mimmo Cavallo. The album was the first of a series of projects based on the reinterpretation of various authors and musical genres, which the artist did not have time to work on: from the Neapolitan classics to the more modern ones by
Pino Daniele and tributes to
Tom Waits and
Billie Holiday. In March 1995, two months before her death, Martini announced to her fan club
Chez Mimì plans for a new album entirely dedicated to the moon and in 1996, it was planned a duet with the singer
Mina. Mina, a few months after Martini's death, was the first singer to dedicate a recording tribute to her in her album
Pappa di latte, which included a personal cover of the song ''
Almeno tu nell'universo''.
Death Martini suffered for some years from painful
fibroids, for which she did not want to undergo surgery, fearing a possible change to her vocal timbre. For this reason, she took prescription medication, which was considered excessive by family, friends and colleagues. A few days before her death, busy with the first concerts of her new tour, the singer was rushed to the hospital twice, both in Acireale and in Bari, due to pain in the stomach and left arm. These symptoms, however, were ignored by her entourage. At the end of a concert, Martini decided to rest and travelled to
Cardano al Campo,
Varese, where she had rented a small apartment near her father's house as their relationship had improved over the years. She died there on 12 May 1995. On 14 May 1995, after a few days of being unreachable, Martini's manager requested police intervention, and firefighters broke into her apartment. The singer's body was found lying on the bed, in pyjamas, with the headphones of a portable cassette player on her ears and with her arm stretched out towards a nearby telephone, with an address book open on the floor. The Public Prosecutor's Office opened an investigation and ordered the autopsy. According to the coroner's report, her death was by
cardiac arrest due to
drug overdose; traces of cocaine were found in her body. Interviewed for the television special
La Storia siamo noi, aired ten years after the artist's death, Martini's sister Olivia said she was the last one to hear her sister on the phone, a few days before she was found: Martini had told her that she felt very tired from the last concerts, also telling her not to worry if she did not answer the phone, because she was busy with the preparation of the song to be performed at the TV show
Viva Napoli. Martini's funeral took place on 16 May in the church of San Giuseppe in
Busto Arsizio, attended by about four thousand people. Her coffin was covered with a flag of Napoli, the football team she supported. After the funeral, her body was cremated, complying with the will of her father, and her ashes were buried in the cemetery of Cavaria con Premezzo. In May 2009
Loredana Bertè, in an interview to the magazine
Musica leggera, returned to talk about her sister's death, casting a shadow on the role of the father in the affair. A year later, during the TV show
Top Secret on 10 June 2010, Loredana Bertè again accused her father of having used violence against his first wife and daughters during childhood; accusations confirmed by her sister Leda, but above all by denouncing that she saw her sister's body covered with bruises and that her body was cremated too soon after death. ==Tributes==