Описание
Lucio Battisti – Amore E Non Amore [New Vinyl LP] Gatefold LP Jacket, 180 Gram, Rmst
Artist: Lucio Battisti
Title: Amore E Non Amore
Format: Vinyl
Attributes: Gatefold LP Jacket, 180 Gram, Rmst
Genre: Rock
UPC: 826853014410
Condition: New
Release Date: 2016
Record Label: Light in the Attic
Album Tracks
1. Dio Mio No
2. Seduto Sotto Un Platano Con Una Margherita in Bocca Guardando Il Fiume Nero Macchiato Dalla Schiuma Bianca Dei Detersivi
3. Una
4. 7 Agosto Di Pomeriggio. Fra Le Lamiere Roventi Di Un Cimitero Di Automobili Solo Io, Silenzioso Eppure Straordinariamente Vivo
5. Se la Mia Pelle Vuoi
6. Davanti Ad Un Distributore Automatico Di Fiori Dell’aereoporto Di Bruxelles Anch’io Chiuso in Una Bolla Di Vetro
7. Supermarket
8. Una Poltrona, Un Bicchiere Di Cognac, Un Televisore. 35 Morti Ai Confini Di Israele E Giordania
Limited 180gm vinyl LP pressing in gatefold sleeve. Remastered from the original tapes. If Lucio Battisti was Italy’s answer to France’s Serge Gainsbourg, then Amore E Non Amore is his own Histoire de Melody Nelson, a concept album that’s widely regarded as a formative artistic achievement (if far from the most hit packed album) of his respective career. Both albums were released in 1971. For Battisti, the concept came from that dichotomous title: there’s a rocky ‘non-love’ side of the album, which has songs about obsession and adultery, and a ‘love’ side of dreamy, prog-rock instrumentals. The album saw Battisti working with lyricist Giulio ‘Mogol’ Rapetti, with whom he’d collaborated closely since 1965. It was Mogol who first convinced Battisti to perform his own songs, and who conceived the idea for this record. Mogol supplied the inspiration, the title and the titles of it’s songs, many of them evocative sentences that flesh out the visual picture where lyrics are absent. Amore E Non Amore was to be a watershed moment for Battisti. His label considered it to be too experimental and advanced for the Italian audience, and refused to release it. They were wrong: it instead set Battisti on a liberating course of artistic freedom and widespread success, and gifted the world one of Italy’s greatest musical exports.