Francesco Piu

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Francesco Piu
Francesco Piu at House of blues, Los Angeles, California.jpg
Piu at The House of Blues, Los Angeles
Background information
Birth nameFrancesco Piu
Born (1981-06-12) 12 June 1981 (age 43)
OriginOsilo, Sassari, Italia
GenresAcoustic blues
Occupation(s)Composer, vocalist
Instrument(s)Vocal, guitar, dobro, weissenborn, banjo, washboard, harmonica
Years active2003–present
Labels Groove Company
Website francescopiu.com
Francesco Piu and Eric Bibb on stage Francesco Piu and Eric Bibb.jpg
Francesco Piu and Eric Bibb on stage

Francesco Piu (born 12 June 1981 in Osilo, Italy) is an Italian composer, guitarist and singer.

Contents

Piu and Tommy Emmanuel on stage Francesco Piu with Tommy Emmanuel.png
Piu and Tommy Emmanuel on stage

Biography

Born and raised in Osilo, in Italy's Sardinia region, Piu began learning the guitar when he was nine years old thanks to his father, who was a bassist.

As an adult, he began playing with various rock-blues groups, and in 2003, he won the Blues for Sardinia contest at the Narcao Blues Festival with his first official group, Blujuice. [1] The following year, he was the opening act for John Mayall at the festival and took up a solo career as a one-man band, playing the acoustic guitar, resonator guitar, banjo, weissenborn, washboard and harmonica.

His first musical repertoire featured acoustic covers of blues classics, as well as blues reinterpretations of rock classics by artists such as Neil Young and Jimi Hendrix. His covers also included elements of soul, funk and rock.

In 2007, he released his first album, Blues Journey, for the Groove Company. After the album came out, he participated in various Italian blues festivals, performing with Guy Davis,  Roy Rogers, [2] Kevin Welch, Andy J. Forest,  Bob Stroger, Eugenio Finardi,  Watermelon Slim  and  Eric Bibb. [3] He was the opening act for Johnny Winter, Robben Ford, Joe Bonamassa, Charlie Musselwhite, Sonny Landreth,  The Derek Trucks Band,  The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Brent Mason,  The Holmes Brothers,  Junior Watson,  John Németh and  Otis Grand. That same year, he joined a group led by Davide Van de Sfroos, performing live and contributing to the album Yanez.

In 2008, Piu won an award at the Out of the Blue Festival in  Samedan, Switzerland. The following year, he won an award at the Delta Blues Festival in Rovigo, Italy, in partnership with the International Blues Challenge  held in  Memphis, Tennessee. In November 2009, he performed with Australian musician Tommy Emmanuel at the Teatro Lirico di Cagliari in Sardinia. [4]

In 2010, he released Live at Amigdala Theatre, an album recorded at the Amigdala Theatre in Trezzo sull'Adda, featuring Pablo Leoni on drums and Davide Speranza on harmonica. [5] He also performed at various national and international festivals, including the Pistoia Blues Festival in Italy (where he was the opening act for Jimmie Vaughan  and  Robert Cray); the Black and Blue Festival in Montreal (opening for  Larry Carlton); the Magic Blues Festival in Switzerland; the Santa Blues Festival in Tenerife (playing guitar for the American singer  Sandra Hall); and the Blues Au Chateau Festival in France.

In 2011, he went on a theatrical tour as the opening act for the Treves Blues Band. That November, he won the Premio Maria Carta award.

In 2012, he released his second studio album, Ma-Moo Tones, produced by Eric Bibb. [6] The album was named one of the "Best 10 Records of the Year" by the magazine Buscadero , and Piu began a long tour that included shows in Canada (where he performed at the famous El Mocambo), France (where he played at the Cognac Blues Passions Festival), Spain, the United Kingdom, Norway, Slovenia, Switzerland, and Germany (where he opened for Albert Lee).

In 2014, Piu released Live at Bloom, in which he used a hybrid guitar with two bass strings, called the Reani guitarbass. Also, that year, the Italian Blues River Festival gave him the Gianni Mangione Blues Award.

In January 2015, he started his first American tour. He performed in Mississippi  (Club Ebony in  Indianola, Ground Zero, the Shack Up Inn, and Red's Juke Joint in Clarksdale),  Tennessee  (the Center for Southern Folklore), and California (House of Blues in Los Angeles and Biscuits and Blues in San Francisco), and recorded at Sun Studio  in Memphis. [7]

Discography

Albums

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References

  1. "Narcao Blues : Il vero blues sbarca in SARDEGNA". Archived from the original on July 5, 2012. Retrieved February 27, 2015.
  2. "Roy Rogers Paolo Bonfanti Francesco Piu – BLUES WITH A FEELING". YouTube. 2011-06-22. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  3. "ERIC BIBB & FRANCESCO PIU Trio • Don't Let Nobody Drag Your Spirit Down". YouTube. 2012-11-28. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  4. Piu, Francesco (2009-12-02). "Tommy Emmanuel & Francesco Piu – Stevie'S Blues". YouTube. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  5. "Folkclub – Francesco Piu Trio". Folkclub.it. Archived from the original on 2012-03-19. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  6. "Francesco Piu – Ma-Moo Tones :: Le recensioni di OndaRock". Ondarock.it. 2012-03-20. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  7. "Francesco Piu Live@Sun Studio : Jesus". YouTube. 2015-03-05. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  8. "Francesco Piu". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2023-06-03.
  9. "Francesco Piu : Album Discography". AllMusic . Retrieved 2023-06-03.