"When you wake up and feel shattered
take strength and face your day
don't retrace your usual steps
a moment would be enough"
Sometimes, a song's verse is enough to express what a thousand words of any speech wouldn't be able to. The four lines of that verse, immediate, direct, and sincere, still carry a disarming power today. In a present dominated by endless rap lyrics, where often nothing is said, a song like Un Giorno Credi by Edoardo Bennato seems to be worth its weight in gold. But not only compared to other genres and artists. The song itself is already a small masterpiece, one that an artist can afford only once in a career. And it's the strength of the universal simplicity of its lyrics that is the winning formula of a timeless track, likely even a hundred years from now. Thus, Bennato creates a powerful song without resorting to rhetoric or the saccharine sweetness where often Italian music has taken refuge. Un Giorno Credi speaks in the second person singular, speaks to me, to you, to the author himself; a true act of willpower, an encouragement not to give up, to be able to make a decisive change in one's life. In a frenzied climax, magnificently supported by an explosive orchestra, the words written by Patrizio Trampetti come through, at first probably addressed to someone still malleable, capable of changing their life for the better, and ultimately resigned towards those who have decided to throw themselves away, to those who spend their time constantly telling lies to others, already feeling finished, dead inside.
"While you are the absurd personified
and you already see yourself old and decrepit
telling everyone
about your fake accident"
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