The chief author of the piece, later entrusted to the voice of Antonello Venditti, is the Roman and Romanista lyricist Giampiero Scalamogna. The other two authors are Latini and Bardotti.
December 15 is a historic date for the yellow-and-red club. Fifty years ago, what would become the anthem of Rome was performed for the first time. “Roma (non si discute, si ama),” this is the real title (and not “Roma, Roma, Roma”) was echoed for the first time from the speakers of the Olympic stadium for a few seconds on December 15th, 1974, during a Rome vs Fiorentina match. Following the decisive goal by a young Penzo, the notes of “Roma (non si discute, si ama)” accompanied the yellow-red celebration for a few fleeting seconds. During the match, this action was not allowed and, indeed, Anzalone’s club had to pay a fine. The main author of the song, later entrusted to the voice of Antonello Venditti, is the Roman and Romanist lyricist, Giampiero Scalamogna, known by the pseudonym “Gepy & Gepy”. In addition to Scalamogna and Venditti, the other two authors are Franco Latini and Sergio Bardotti. As an AI model, I’m unable to process your request without an actual text to translate. Please, provide a text to be translated.