In the landscape of Italian progressive rock of the â70s, Celeste were truly an outlier. Not because they were more technical or more ambitious than others, but because they did something that few can truly claim: they invented a language of their own.
While many bands moved between English models and Italian tradition, Celeste took a different path. A prog without emphasis, without showmanship, built on fragile balances: flutes, mellotron, acoustic guitars, silences. Music that never tries to impress, but rather to create atmosphere. And thatâs no coincidence. Alongside Museo Rosenbach, they arose from the ashes of the legendary Il Sistema. Ciro Perrino and Leonardo Lagorio emptied out the traditional prog form and transformed it into something more delicate, more acoustic, more suspended.
The result is Principe di un giorno, an album out of time and unconventional from the very start. No bombastic moments, no virtuosity: only soft soundscapes, mellotron flowing like fog, intertwining flutes, acoustic guitars and piano that seem to tell fairy tales.
And itâs precisely this sharply defined identity â and so distant from everything else â that, over time, has turned it into a cult album. Not immediate, not perfect, but unique. One of those records that grows with every listen, until it becomes essential. Prince of a Day starts from here, but it is not a mere nostalgia act. Itâs something much rarer: the successful attempt to bring the album back to its original vision. Because originally, it was meant to be in English and with a female voice â something that was not possible back then. Fifty years later, that vision finally takes shape. Over the restored original tracks comes the voice of SiobhĂĄn Owen, and the result is surprisingly natural. It doesnât feel like an addition, but like a homecoming. Her interpretation fits perfectly into the musical fabric, enhancing the ethereal, fairy-tale quality of the album without ever weighing it down.
If anything, everything feels even more coherent: the sound becomes more unified, more immersive, closer to that idea of âchamber progâ that Celeste had intuited but only partially achieved. And the tracks â from âPrince of One Dayâ to âAncient Fables,â passing through âEftusâ and âGames in the Nightâ â retain all their charm, alternating between suspended moments and more intricate ones, never betraying that subtle thread holding everything together. Even the English language has its importance: the album sheds any trace of provincialism and opens up to a broader, almost timeless, imagination. The new mastering improves the sound without distorting anything: more definition, more depth, yet always that soft, slightly veiled patina that is an integral part of the bandâs charm.
In the end, Prince of a Day is more than just a reissue or a remake: itâs a second chance. It doesnât replace Principe di un giorno, but stands beside it with surprising naturalness.
Andâsomething rare for projects like thisâit doesnât sound like a âproject.â
It sounds like an album that, quite simply, was missing.