Brivido
My purpose here is to quietly let you know (in a very low voice so as not to be heard) about tracks or LPs that have been criticized or labeled as pop or commercial, but are actually well-made. However, due to the stereotype that "only those who do rock and the transgressive make great music, everything else is garbage or trivial," they are often overlooked or people feel embarrassed to share them. So, quietly, in a whisper, secretly, I'm pointing out that in 1979, Rettore released a pretty decent LP, in Italian, well before she became known for her transgressive style (from Kobra onward, still of good quality for being made in Italy in Italian). She created this very Italian pop album that introduced her to the general public. It wasn't just Splendido Splendente (a Disco-Music track, what rock is that, as she later boasted), but there were other interesting POP tracks (only another was the Disco "Divino Divina"), and instead, this album has only been remembered for the Red vinyl...
My purpose here is to quietly let you know (in a very low voice so as not to be heard) about tracks or LPs that have been criticized or labeled as pop or commercial, but are actually well-made. However, due to the stereotype that "only those who do rock and the transgressive make great music, everything else is garbage or trivial," they are often overlooked or people feel embarrassed to share them. So, quietly, in a whisper, secretly, I'm pointing out that in 1979, Rettore released a pretty decent LP, in Italian, well before she became known for her transgressive style (from Kobra onward, still of good quality for being made in Italy in Italian). She created this very Italian pop album that introduced her to the general public. It wasn't just Splendido Splendente (a Disco-Music track, what rock is that, as she later boasted), but there were other interesting POP tracks (only another was the Disco "Divino Divina"), and instead, this album has only been remembered for the Red vinyl...
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