Le nuvole

Le nuvole
Studio album by Fabrizio De André
Released September 24, 1990
Genre Folk, Pop, World music
Length 41 min 24 s
Label Ricordi, Fonit Cetra
Producer Fabrizio De André, Mauro Pagani
Fabrizio De André chronology
Crêuza de mä
(1984)
Fabrizio De André
(1990)
Anime salve
(1996)
Professional ratings
Review scores
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Allmusic link

Le nuvole (The Clouds) is an album by Italian singer-songwriter Fabrizio De André, released in 1990. The songs were written by Fabrizio De André and Mauro Pagani. As Pagani revealed in an interview within the 2011 DVD biographical documentary series Dentro Faber (i.e. Inside Faber, the latter being De André's nickname in Genoese), he is responsible for the writing of most of the music, while De André wrote all of the lyrics,[1] except for Don Raffaè, detailed below, whose lyric writing is shared between De André and singer-songwriter Massimo Bubola. Pagani's collaboration with De André, always according to the Lombard musician, happened in an identical way for De André's previous album, Crêuza de mä, with Pagani setting to music De André's already fully written lyrics, on the basis of a few melodic ideas from the latter. His next collaboration, with fellow Genoan Ivano Fossati on Anime salve, would be more equally balanced, with he and Fossati composing music by actually playing together.[2]

Overview

Mégu megún and 'Â çímma are written in Genoese, Monti di Mola in Gallurese. Don Raffaè, a satirical/parody song about Italian Camorra boss Raffaele Cutolo, is partly sung in Neapolitan from the point of view of a jailer in the Poggioreale prison where Cutolo is kept; by portraying the character as a close friend of the titular Raffaele's, De André uses references to the real Cutolo (such as the famous "maxi-trial" in the late Eighties, where he was sentenced to life imprisonment), never naming him explicitly, to spoof a number of well-known Italian stereotypes about Camorra, Naples and Neapolitans in general. An ironic footnote printed in the booklet after the lyrics says: "The facts and characters in this song are fictional. Any references to actual people are nothing but coincidences."[3] In 1992 the song was covered by Roberto Murolo as a duet with De André; Murolo's cover is included in his album "Ottanta voglia di cantare", celebrating the singer's 80th birthday - the album's title being a pun on Ho tanta voglia (i.e. I feel like (singing) so much) and ottanta (i.e. eighty).[4]

Track listing

  1. Le nuvole (De André/Pagani) – 2:16
  2. Ottocento (De André/Pagani) – 4:56
  3. Don Raffaè (De André/Massimo Bubola[5] – De André/Pagani) – 4:08
  4. La domenica delle salme (De André/Pagani) – 7:35
  5. Mégu megún [i.e. Doctor, great doctor] (De André/Ivano Fossati – De André/Pagani) – 5:22
  6. La nova gelosia [i.e. The new blind] (Neapolitan anonymous, 18th Century) – 3:04
  7. 'Â çímma [i.e. The rope] (De André/Fossati – De André/Pagani) – 6:18
  8. Monti di Mola [the Gallurese name for today's Costa Smeralda] (De André/Pagani) – 7:45

Awards

References

  1. Dentro Faber, DVD 5: Genova ed il Mediterraneo (Genoa and the Mediterranean)-
  2. Dentro Faber, DVD 2: Gli ultimi (The lesser ones).
  3. Le nuvole CD booklet.
  4. Discography of Roberto Murolo: "Ottanta voglia di cantare"
  5. (Italian) Discography of Massimo Bubola
  6. Named after Luigi Tenco
  7. (Italian) "Targa Tenco" prize (click on "GLI ARTISTI", "TARGHE TENCO", "ALBUM")
  8. (Italian) "Targa Tenco" prize (click on "GLI ARTISTI", "TARGHE TENCO", "CANZONE")

External links

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