Cover di Umanamente uomo: il sogno

Umanamente uomo: il sogno

Album - 1972 - DeB Id: 71163
By Lucio Battisti
8 Tracks 3 Reviews Definitions Listenings Video 4 Charts

Reviews

Album DeRango™ 67,84

Lucio Battisti

Umanamente uomo: il sogno 123asterisco

 Not that I understood much, in fact. I would say I didn’t understand a thing. I simply liked drawing with The one with the fire.

 Objectivity, in this case, is mute in the face of the unpredictability of a choice.

 Explore the emotional depths of Lucio Battisti's Umanamente uomo: il sogno and rediscover a musical journey beyond rankings.

💬 25
5063
📈 4,35
Album DeRango™ 19,09

Lucio Battisti

Umanamente uomo: il sogno Viva Lì

 "'Umanamente uomo: il sogno' is a fundamental album to understand and analyze the Battisti phenomenon."

 "Battisti goes beyond his own ideas and convictions: he invents sweet and rarefied melodies and breaks the chains of monotony."

 Explore Lucio Battisti's timeless masterpiece and experience the magic of 'Umanamente uomo: il sogno' today!

💬 21
12001
📈 4,09
Album DeRango™ 15,65

Lucio Battisti

Umanamente uomo: il sogno the clash

 A man, indeed, melancholic, nostalgic, naive, and defeated.

 The dream has turned into a nightmare.

 Dive into Lucio Battisti’s timeless melodies and poetic dreams—listen to 'Umanamente uomo: il sogno' today!

💬 10
14983
📈 4,00
Il carretto passava e quell' uomo gridava 'gelati!'
al ventuno del mese i nostri soldi erano gi� finiti
io pensavo a mia madre e rivedevo i suoi vestiti
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Che sensazione di leggera follia
sta colorando l'anima mia
immaginando preparo il cuscino
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Tu vestita di fiori
o di fari in città
con la nebbia o i colori
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La stalla con i buoi,
per cielo gli occhi tuoi
e l'acqua e i pesci e poi
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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.
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