Marco Masini

Last updated

Marco Masini
Marco Masini tour2015.jpg
Born18 September 1964 (1964-09-18) (age 60)
Florence, Italy
Occupations
  • Singer-songwriter
  • musician
  • pianist
Years active1988–present
Website www.marcomasini.it

Marco Masini (born 18 September 1964) is an Italian singer-songwriter, musician and pianist. As of 2021, he has released 26 albums. His best-known songs include "Disperato" (1990) and "L'uomo volante" (2004).[ citation needed ]

Contents

Early years

Marco Masini was born in Florence, Tuscany on 18 September 1964. [1] His mother, Anna Maria, sang and played piano. She previously worked as an elementary school teacher before leaving the workforce to raise her family. His father, Giancarlo, worked as a hair product representative.[ citation needed ]

Masini received a toy piano for Christmas at age three and soon began attending music classes. During high school, he started a band, Errata Corrige, with his friends before dropping out of school at 16. This caused tension within his family, particularly between him and his father. For a time, he worked with his father as a representative. In 1980, the family opened a bar in Florence, but was forced to sell it a few years later when his mother was diagnosed with cancer. Masini left to serve in the army, returning on 22 August 1984, one day before the death of his mother.[ citation needed ]

Music career

Masini got his start in the music business through record producer Giancarlo Bigazzi, who set him up to collaborate with artists like Raf and Umberto Tozzi. In 1990, he participated in the 40th Sanremo Music Festival and won first prize as new artist of the year with his song "Disperato." The same year, he released his debut album, Marco Masini. In 1991, he won third place at the Sanremo Music Festival with his song "Perché lo fai" and subsequently released his second album, Malinconoia. Despite the album's overall somber mood, it was a hit in the Italian charts.[ citation needed ] The "Malinconoia" music video, which was taped during a concert at PalaEUR in Rome, won first prize for Best Live Video at the 1991 RiminiCinema Film Festival. The song also won first prize at the Festivalbar in the long playing records category that summer.[ citation needed ]

His third album, T'innamorerai, was released in 1993. The song "Vaffanculo" ("fuck off") generated enough controversy to be banned by most radio and television networks. It also contained several negative verses directed at record labels and their policies.[ citation needed ] At the same time, the album sold more than one million copies sold worldwide. [2] In an interview for the newspaper Corriere della Sera in 1993, he dedicated the song to "the liars and who call me 'prophet of the depression'," referring to those who consider his music to be too sad. [3]

In January 1995, his fourth album, Il Cielo della Vergine, was released in Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Spain, and Latin America. Two of the songs, "Bella Stronza" ("Beautiful Bitch") and "Principessa", again drew criticism for being too direct and explicit. In 1996, he released L'Amore Sia Con Te, a greatest hits compilation, which included a remastering of "Meglio Solo" from Disperato. This collection was also released with a slightly different track list in Spanish speaking countries under the name Mi amor allí estará. His L'amore Sia Con Te tour kicked off during that summer. In 1997, he sang "La Gente di Cuore" on Enrico Ruggeri's album Domani è un altro giorno. In November 1998, he released the album Scimmie on the Ma label, which he founded with Mario Manzani and Marco Poggione. The album was more inspired by rock music from the 1970s than his previous albums. While reviews from critics were generally positive, the public opinion was that it was a commercial failure.[ citation needed ]

In 2020, he performed the song "Il confronto" at the Sanremo Music Festival. [4]

Personal life

Masini was engaged to Romina Contiero from 2001 to 2005.

Discography

Studio albums
Live albums
Compilation albums
Singles
Guest appearances
Others

Books

References

  1. Simonis, Damien (1 March 2006). Florence . Lonely Planet. pp.  37–. ISBN   978-1-74059-809-5 . Retrieved 28 July 2011.
  2. Coppola, Alessio (5 May 2022). "Chi è Marco Masini, la biografia del cantautore italiano". True News. (in Italian). Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  3. "Masini: il mio " vaff..." ai bugiardi" [Masini: my "vaff..." to the liars]. Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Interviewed by Luzzatto Mario Fegiz. 13 January 1993. p. 32.
  4. "Sanremo 2020: Ecco chi sono i 22 Big in gara della 70esima edizione del Festival". Coming Soon. 31 December 2019. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Mietta
with "Canzoni"
Sanremo Music Festival
Winner Newcomers section

1990
Succeeded by
Paolo Vallesi
with "Le persone inutili"
Preceded by Sanremo Music Festival
Winner

2004
Succeeded by