Cover di L'apparenza

L'apparenza

Album - 10 october 1988 - DeB Id: 97519
By Lucio Battisti
8 Tracks 4 Reviews Definitions Listenings Video 4 Charts

Reviews

5 Questions To DeRango™ 62,20

Lucio Battisti

L'apparenza ygmarchi2

 "Oh, it is so magical. The harmonies are mainly all Lucio's. He demoed the songs with a very simple keyboard with his voice."

 "At that time drum machines were widely used and the use of rhythmic keyboards gave it this feeling of almost unemotion. This is what he wanted... the appearance."

 Dive into Lucio Battisti's 'L'apparenza' and experience the magical fusion of innovative arrangements and timeless emotion.

💬 18
6649
📈 4,63
Album DeRango™ 39,87

Lucio Battisti

L'apparenza Martello

 "A song that seems to talk about love but doesn’t actually talk about love."

 "The lyrics are where the amorous theme is rendered almost explicitly, with an arrangement both gentle and powerful."

 Dive into the enigmatic sounds of L'apparenza and experience Lucio Battisti’s unique musical journey now!

💬 16
5453
📈 4,55
Album DeRango™ 26,85

Lucio Battisti

L'apparenza Cialtronius

 Hypnotic disquietude, vague malaise, subtle alienation.

 A genius of music and one of words duet from a distance and interpenetrate languidly in a cold embrace.

 Dive into Lucio Battisti's mysterious 'L'apparenza' — experience its hypnotic melodies and poetic depths now.

💬 18
3424
📈 3,79
Album DeRango™ 18,29

Lucio Battisti

L'apparenza bogusman

 The appearance of the word, in its ambiguity, is already laden with all possible meanings which will be revealed to the listener differently each time.

 Words and music can free themselves from the obscenity of having to be necessarily (and basely) univocal and clear.

 Dive into the rich layers of L'apparenza and discover a unique blend of poetry and sound by Lucio Battisti.

💬 40
17930
📈 3,50

You and L'apparenza

Lucio Battisti

Lucio Battisti (1943–1998) was an Italian singer, composer and producer from Poggio Bustone. He rose to prominence in the late 1960s and 1970s with lyricist Mogol, crafting many of Italy’s most beloved songs, and later pursued a radical electronic and linguistic shift with Pasquale Panella (1986–1994). From 1980 onward he withdrew from concerts, TV and interviews, insisting the art should speak for the artist.
104 Reviews

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