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For fans of patrizia laquidara, lovers of brazilian and contemporary italian music, listeners seeking sensual and poetic vocal albums.
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LA RECENSIONE

"Because the step of a tightrope walker on his taut rope
is among the most beautiful and poetic things a man
can encounter by looking up"

Perhaps the tightrope walker was actually an angel... And perhaps that angel fell to earth...

Patrizia Laquidara, Catanese artist but, as she defines herself, "citizen of the world", is at her second studio work. I must admit that I am not deeply familiar with her first, "Indirizzo portoghese", except for the wonderful "Mielato" song heard on the radio and immediately loved madly.

Patrizia's voice is wonderful, warm, enveloping, cheeky, and sensual as few in the contemporary Italian scene. Her songs are strongly influenced by the tradition of Brazilian music and manage to unleash enormous sensuality and freshness. The gems of the album are "Addosso" and "Noite Luar" which have already been part of the soundtrack of "Manuale d'amore".

Worth listening to.

P.S.: Patrizia is beautiful!

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Summary by Bot

Patrizia Laquidara's second studio album, Funambola, showcases her warm, sensual voice with strong Brazilian musical influences. Highlighted tracks "Addosso" and "Noite Luar" have gained recognition from the movie Manuale d'amore. The album delivers freshness and poetic beauty, confirming Laquidara as a distinctive voice in contemporary Italian music.

Tracklist Videos

01   Pioggia senza zucchero (03:39)

02   Se qualcuno (03:26)

03   Senza pelle (04:03)

04   Nuove confusioni (04:00)

05   L'equilibrio è un miracolo (04:09)

06   Le cose (03:10)

07   Addosso (03:22)

08   Ziza (03:53)

09   Chiaro e gelido mattino (04:13)

10   Oppure no (02:57)

11   Va dove il mondo va (04:10)

12   Personaggio (05:04)

13   Noite luar (04:11)

Patrizia Laquidara

Catanese (Italian) singer-songwriter noted for a warm, sensual voice and strong Portuguese/Brazilian musical influences; reviewed DeBaser coverage highlights collaborations with Hotel Rif, lyricist Enio Sartori and production ties to Arto Lindsay, and mentions a Sanremo appearance.
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