Chocabeck | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 3 November 2010 | |||
Studio | EastWest Studios, Hollywood Henson Studios, Hollywood | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 43:30 | |||
Label | Polydor, Universal | |||
Producer | Don Was, Brendan O'Brien, Zucchero Fornaciari | |||
Zucchero chronology | ||||
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Singles from Chocabeck | ||||
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Chocabeck is the eleventh studio album by Italian blues rock singer-songwriter Zucchero Fornaciari released in 2010.
The term chocabeck derives from the Emilian equivalent to Italian word schioccabecco, meaning the sound of empty beak. [1] [2] He heard it from his father when was very young, describing the social conditions of the time. [3] The dialectal term spicinfrin means a cute, but rebellious boy. He made this kind of album in rebellion against the current music industry system. [4]
It is a concept album, describing a typical Sunday from dawn to dusk in a small countryside Italian village in the region where he grew up. It consists of an autumnal cycle of songs. [1] [5] [6] It's an album in which Zucchero returns to his roots, [1] and is introspective and allegorical about life, positivity, and hope. [3] [6] Each song was accompanied by a music video, with Francesco Guccini appearing in the video of "Un soffio caldo". [6]
Like his previous albums, it includes many notable collaborations. [3] Brian Wilson from the Beach Boys sings backing vocals the title track. [5] The lyrics of the opening song "Un soffio caldo" were co-written with renowned Italian songwriter Guccini, while "Oltre le rive" was written with Pacifico. The lyrics of the last song "God bless the child" were written by Roland Orzabal from the band Tears for Fears, Chaz Jankel, and Derek Hussey. The English versions of "Alla fine" ("Too Late") and "Chocabeck" ("Spirit Together") were written by Iggy Pop. [6]
The collaboration with U2's Bono is Zucchero's third translation after translating into English the songs "Miserere" (1992) and "Blu" ("Blue"; 1998). The lyrics of "Someone Else's Tears" were written by Bono, while Zucchero freely translated them in the counterpart "Il suono della domenica". [6] The song in English is included as bonus track in the Italian edition in iTunes store. [6] According to Zucchero's interpretation of English lyrics, when Bono wrote the song he was probably inspired by something painful he saw or felt. [6] When he heard Zucchero's version before the U2's concert in Rome, Bono initially concentrated silently while it was played, and afterward cried. Zucchero considers the song to be the most representative of the album. [6]
The album has many arpeggiated guitars, the winds were replaced by the brass, with English horn, harpsichord. Zucchero tried to diminish the rhythmic section, it has percussion but not real drum kit, neither bass, because they take melodic space, while for the album's tematic wanted to leave space for more suspended rhythms. The song "Chocabeck" although modern has 60's influence. [6] "È un peccato morir" is a stirring ballad with nostalgia of days gone by, "Un soffio caldo" is a lyrical adventure through the Italian landscape, "Vedo nero" is a joyous tongue-in-check romp about adolescent eroticism. [1]
The first single in Italy was the song "È un peccato morir", and in the rest of Europe "Chocabeck" and "Vedo nero". The first single was certified Gold by the Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana, and was #1 for six weeks at the radio Music Control Italia tracked by Nielsen SoundScan. [7] [8] "Vedo nero" was certified Platinum by FIMI.
The album was on the FIMI Italian album charts for 59 weeks, peaking at #1 for two weeks. [9] The album was certified 5× Platinum, and already sold over 500,000 copies in Europe before the start of the tour. [10] As has been the case with Zucchero's previous albums, it was released in Italian, European and American edition. The European edition Il Suono Della Domenica includes instead the original English version by Bono, while the American edition (also titled as Zucchero Who?) is sung entirely in English, i.e. including the lyrics by Iggy Pop. [5] In 2011 was also released a deluxe edition with both CDs, and a DVD collection of the music videos. [11]
Fornaciari toured to promote this album in 2011–2012 with Chocabeck World Tour, with over 120 concerts in Europe, Australia, North and South America, almost all sold-out in presale, [12] notably with five consecutive concerts at Arena in Verona. [13]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [5] |
Rockol | [14] |
Rolling Stone | [15] |
PopMatters | [16] |
The album has generally met with positive reviews. Mariano Prunes from Allmusic gave the (Italian edition) album 4/5 stars, praising "its stylistic and thematic consistency and, of course, Zucchero's emotive singing". The "first three songs, for instance, constitute almost a mini-suite of quiet, hymn-like ballads that set the mood for most of the album", and it "is only when the day reaches noon that loud guitars and soul background vocals come back to announce a double dose of old-school Zucchero", with "the last three tracks progressively slow things down, drawing closed a perfect circle". He concluded that as "the list of collaborators is both impressive and key to the album's success", Zucchero "looks like an artist capable of reinventing himself in a poignant and dignified manner". [5] The experienced Italian musical reviewer Franco Zanetti from Rockol also gave the Italian album 4/5 stars, and praised the production, musicians and Zucchero's singing. [14]
Frank Lähnemann from German Rolling Stone reviewed the European edition and gave it 2/5 stars, noting that there few outliers, not enough for the market and entry in the books of innovations, and questioned why Brian Wilson was only used in the choir. [15] Jonathan Sanders from PopMatters reviewed the American (English) edition and gave it 3/10 stars, ignoring the concept and approaching the album with a stigma Zucchero being Italian Bruce Springsteen, resulting with disappointment, concluding that the "bulk of its appeal" is "lost in trans-Atlantic translation", and that "some of the best songs are the ones Zucchero doesn't even bother translating: "Oltre Le Rive" ... full of melodies that fail to resonate coupled with vocals that fail to define Zucchero as anything but an Italian-rock curiosity". [16]
All tracks are written by Zucchero Fornaciari, except where noted.
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Un soffio caldo" | 5:02 | ||
2. | "Il suono della domenica" | 3:36 | ||
3. | "Soldati nella mia citta" | 3:19 | ||
4. | "È un peccato morir" | Pasqualle Panella, Zucchero | 3:41 | |
5. | "Vedo nero" | Mimmo Cavallo, Zucchero | Mimmo Cavallo, Zucchero | 3:53 |
6. | "Oltre le rive" | Pacifico, Zucchero | G. Cancogni, L. De Crescenzo, M. Marcolini, Zucchero | 4:39 |
7. | "Un uovo sodo" | 3:14 | ||
8. | "Chocabeck" | Pasquale Panella, Zucchero | 4:42 | |
9. | "Alla fine" | 3:43 | ||
10. | "Spicinfrin boy" | 3:50 | ||
11. | "God bless the child" | Chaz Jankel, Roland Orzabal, Derek Hussey | 3:47 |
All tracks are written by Zucchero Fornaciari, except where noted.
No. | Title | Lyrics | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Life" (Un soffio caldo) | 5:02 | |
2. | "Someone Else's Tears" (Il suono della domenica) | Bono | 3:36 |
3. | "Soldati nella mia citta" | 3:19 | |
4. | "Glory" (È un peccato morir) | 3:41 | |
5. | "Devil In My Mirror" (Vedo nero) | 3:53 | |
6. | "Oltre le rive" | 4:39 | |
7. | "Gotta Feeling" (Un uovo sodo) | 3:15 | |
8. | "Spirit Together" (Chocabeck) | Iggy Pop | 4:42 |
9. | "Too Late" (Alla fine) | Iggy Pop | 3:43 |
10. | "In the Sky" (Spicinfrin boy) | 3:49 | |
11. | "God bless the child" | 3:47 |
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Austria (IFPI Austria) [27] | Gold | 10,000* |
Italy (FIMI) [28] | 5× Platinum | 300,000* |
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland) [29] | Platinum | 20,000^ |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
Adelmo Fornaciari, more commonly known by his stage name Zucchero Fornaciari or simply Zucchero, is an Italian singer, musician and songwriter. His stage name is the Italian word for "sugar", as his elementary teacher used to call him. His music is largely inspired by gospel, soul, blues and rock music, and alternates between Italian ballads and more rhythmic R&B-boogie-like pieces. He is credited as the "father of Italian blues", introducing blues to the big stage in Italy. He is one of the few European blues artists who still enjoys great international success.
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Fly is the tenth studio album by the Italian blues rock singer-songwriter Zucchero Fornaciari, released on 22 September 2006. The album was mostly recorded in 2006 at the Henson Recording Studios in Hollywood with producer Don Was, and previewed at the historic Ca' Vendramin Calergi in Venice, on 18 September 2006.
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The discography of Zucchero, an Italian rock blues singer-songwriter, consists of 15 studio albums, one soundtrack album, seven compilation albums, two live albums and more than sixty singles. In 1993, Zucchero has also released a studio album with the band Adelmo e i suoi Sorapis, also including Equipe 84's Maurizio Vandelli and Pooh's Dodi Battaglia.
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Fabrizio Mobrici, known by his stage name Fabrizio Moro, is an Italian singer-songwriter. He released his debut album in 2000 and he achieved commercial success in 2007, after winning the Newcomers' Section of the Sanremo Music Festival with his entry "Pensa". The song became a number-one hit in Italy, while the album with the same title was certified gold by the Italian Music Industry Federation.
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Black Cat is the thirteenth studio album by the Italian blues rock singer-songwriter Zucchero Fornaciari, released on 29 April 2016. It's his first full-length studio album in six years, after Chocabeck in 2010, given that La Sesión Cubana (2012) was a mix of unreleased, previously released and cover songs.
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Lisa Hunt is an American Byron Bay-based soul singer. Hunt rose to fame in Italy as an associated act and backup singer of Zucchero Fornaciari, touring with him from the late 1980s until the 2000s. She has been particularly praised for her collaboration on Zucchero's fifth album Oro Incenso & Birra, and for her subsequent performance in Zucchero's first live album Live at the Kremlin, particularly for her solo in the song "Madre dolcissima". Hunt recorded several songs with Fornaciari, including "Something Strong", from the soundtrack album Snack Bar Budapest. She has released a total four albums, the first, A Little Piece of Magic, with Polydor.
Michele Torpedine is an Italian record producer, television personality, drummer and music manager. He has been the producer of many renowned Italian artists such as Andrea Bocelli, Zucchero, and Il Volo, among many others.
dopo 50 milioni di dischi venduti, le regole del mondo discografico e il modo di fare e consumare musica sono cambiati radicalmente. «Regole alle quali mi sono opposto, facendo proprio un disco come questo. È l'inizio di una ribellione».