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Billboard Italy

For the Italian public, he is now an artist who needs no introduction. His surprising climb to second place at the Sanremo Festival 2025 with the song “Volevo Essere un Duro” (“I Wanted to Be a Tough Guy”) made him famous thanks to its mix of tenderness, irony and aesthetic and musical references to glam rock – reinterpreted in his own way. However, for the international public of Eurovision 2025, Lucio Corsi is an artist who is still to be discovered.
Italy’s presence among the “Big Five” guarantees him direct access to the final, but will he be able to replicate his unexpected success of Sanremo? He openly does not aim for victory: “Music for me is not a competition. It would make no sense: how can you compete in music? It’s not a sport,” he says, sounding sincere.

However, everyone’s eyes and ears are focused on the Saturday (May 17) final, where the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest winner will be decided. Billboard Italy interviewed the “anti-hero” songwriter after his performance in the first semifinal to gather his thoughts and impressions before the final.

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What was your first impression of Eurovision?

It was interesting to see how many rehearsals there are before the performance. They are repeated several times a day and there is great attention to every little detail. There is also great readiness to improve the shots and the sound. It is a fortune to be able to invent what we want on stage.

What are the similarities and differences between Sanremo and Eurovision?

In Sanremo everything is very concentrated: from morning to evening there are interviews, rehearsals, performances. Here, instead, everything is more dilated in time and there are fewer things on your schedule. In Sanremo you continuously breathe the atmosphere of the festival, here you can also isolate yourself: in some moments you don’t even feel like you are at Eurovision. It is also interesting to be able to encounter other types of musical expression, from other countries and with other conceptions of the songs.

You said that you particularly like Napa, the Portuguese band. Have you had the chance to meet other Eurovision artists in person?

Yes, I met Go-Jo, the Australian artist. I first met him by chance while walking in Rome: we turned a corner and found ourselves face to face. It’s a small world…. Then I met [Estonian artist] Tommy Cash here in the hotel. These encounters are among the nice things of these experiences.

After your performance, many people appreciated your reference to a glam rock sound and aesthetic. Is it an element you are counting on to appeal to an international audience?

I have always tried to find my own way of being inspired by that type of sound. I have always liked it, since adolescence. It is not something aimed at making an impression: it just interests me on the level of composition, sound, research. However, I like many types of music, from folk to prog rock. In the future, I would like to delve into other things as well. This is just a snapshot of this period of mine.

How was your “anti-hero” style received by those who didn’t know you before?

I’m very happy that the English subtitles to the lyrics did their job. I’m happy to see that foreign journalists understood the meaning of the song. I hope that can happen in the final, too. The English translation we did is the simplest possible, because it has to reach non-native speakers as well. We didn’t need a sophisticated translation but a clear, immediate text.

Your collaboration with Tommaso Ottomano, who is with you on stage, is very close: tell us about the human and professional relationship that binds you guys.

He’s like a brother. We’ve known each other since we were kids and we’ve invented everything together, from songs to music videos [Ottomano is also a director, ed.]. We both come from Tuscan, in particular from Maremma, which is a sort of Italian Wild West. Music took us away from the boredom of the province, which is also wonderful because it’s very similar to peace. Learning to deal with such boredom as kids gave us the opportunity to find escapes in music. Also, the stories of people from the provinces are very epic: since the places are “small,” these stories have to be in some way gigantic. This inspires me a lot.

Lucio Corsi

Francis Delacroix/Billboard Italy

Irama continues to grow, and very rapidly too – like a stone that rolls slowly and picks up speed, as he himself defined the way he would like his songs to go. His participation in the Sanremo Festival, scheduled for February 11-15, is already the 29-year-old’s sixth. For bookmakers he is among the potential winners. However, the song he presents in Sanremo – which will also be released in Spanish for the Latin American market – is titled “Lentamente,” which means “Slowly.”

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“It tells a carnal story: the destruction of a love that is seen as eternal and instead ends. Slowly, and on both sides,” is how he introduced it. “It has a British atmosphere given by the Hammond organ, but also a very Italian melody: I wanted to present a song different from the usual.”

Irama (stage name of Filippo Maria Fanti) may seem cold and distant only if you look at it from afar. Up close, this multi-platinum artist is humorous and kind. He has his very precise ideas, especially when it comes to music. He says: “This song simply moves me deeply, which is why I presented it for the contest. In the studio I wrote down the melodies with my authors and producers, but without thinking about Sanremo.”

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Didn’t you have [Sanremo] as your goal?

No, I wouldn’t have wanted to go back to Sanremo. My record company [Warner Music Italy, ed.] and my team were warned. But then I kept listening to the song, even at night, and I liked it more and more. So at a meeting – where it is rare for me to participate – I played this song. Everyone cheered.

You had other plans at first?

Right. I wanted to focus on the tour and my new album, but Sanremo is a great opportunity to make everyone listen to your music. I’m interested in that.

“Lentamente” will also be published in Spanish for the Latin American market. How do you think you will be perceived there?

I still have to build everything in that world, but I sense a certain interest. I would like my music to have as international a vision as possible.

Have you read the journalists’ reviews?

Just because they sent them to me. It’s not something I like to do.

Was there anything that wasn’t understood, in your opinion?

Someone wrote that the songwriter is only Blanco, and this in itself is madness, because I always co-write my own songs. Then I read other things that didn’t convince me. Perhaps journalists have always seen me as too distant, which happens much less with normal people. It’s a shame. I would like to communicate well with everyone.

What does it depend on?

Sometimes we focus too much on appearances. It seems to me that we look more at aesthetics than emotion. But my songs are way more linked to the latter. I would like my songs to be conceived as boulders that roll slowly and gain speed. This was the case for my previous song “Ovunque Sarai.” However, if they had given me excellent reviews, I would have been worried: all my successes were born from low marks.

Maybe you’re not a person who opens up to everyone.

When I was a child, they taught me a certain type of education and respect for each other’s space. I don’t allow myself to joke too much with those I don’t know well, and this lack of lightness is interpreted as coldness or even arrogance. But I don’t think I’m cold.

Irama

Andrea Ariano/Billboard Italia

At the Sanremo Festival you will also sing the cover of “Say Something” by A Great Big World feat. Christina Aguilera. Was it difficult to choose the song to reinterpret?

A lot, because I’m not an interpreter: there are never covers in my albums. It’s a completely different sport. For this reason, I looked for a song with a style not too different from mine.

When will you release your new album?

I don’t know yet. Many people, when they meet me on the street, no longer ask me for a photo but ask me when my album gets released. There was also a WhatsApp group called “Album 2024” which quickly became “Album 2025.” Until it’s perfect, an album shouldn’t be released. And, for me, albums are never perfect. When I really think I’ve done everything possible to publish the best work possible, then I release it.

Do you want to explore any genre in particular?

It will be a more serious record, I think. However, it will be played a lot with analog instruments, because it is influenced by live performances which are growing more and more.

Where are you writing now? Once upon a time you went to Salento, in Southern Italy, for many days.

True. Years ago, we went there, to places that didn’t cost much. I remember that in a house we even had a stable with a pig inside! Now I love going to beautiful places, perhaps with a swimming pool and a garden, also because I generally don’t take holidays. But then I lock myself in a closet to write. I tried to write in Sardinia, for example, but how do you do it? If you find yourself in front of a sunset you look at it, not write! I think the same thing about concerts: why shoot a video without actually watching the live performance?

Who did you see in concert last year?

Just friends of mine. I went to support them, even singing myself: Annalisa, Riccardo Cocciante, Blanco.

How come you don’t like to go on holiday?

I really can’t. I’ve done it in the past, I went to Thailand, for example. At most I can last four days. After that, I feel useless, I feel like I’m wasting my time.

Would you like to change?

My dream is to get to make music inside a nature reserve, surrounded by the animals I love so much. I wish I could get to a point where I make music more slowly and sporadically.

No one ever answers yes — are you going to Sanremo to win?

I believe that there really isn’t anyone from the new generation who is too attached to the competition. Maybe it was once important to someone, but now it really isn’t. Of course, it’s a great moment if you do win and then go to Eurovision, with that incredible opportunity to make yourself known there too, like Måneskin did. But the challenge is the last thing on your mind.

Irama

Andrea Ariano/Billboard Italia

The Chemical Brothers’ music has been loved by the cinema and video games since the beginning, when in 1995 “Chemical Beats” ended up in the soundtrack of the PlayStation game Wipeout. The latest such appearance is in the film Sonic the Hedgehog 3, where “Galvanize” sounds perfect in a scene with Jim Carrey dancing among laser beams. Tom Rowlands has already worked on commission for some directors such as Darren Aronofsky for Black Swan and Joe Wright for a theatrical production and for the film Hanna, in the latter case paired with Ed Simons (the other half of the Chemical Brothers).

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But this new adventure was really a challenge. With the usual English irony Tom defined “an act of intimidation” the request of director Joe Wright to score the new Sky Original series Mussolini: Son of the Century, based on the novel M. Son of the Century by Antonio Scurati, which was recently released in Italy. The series tells the story of the birth of fascism in Italy and the rise to power of Benito Mussolini. The challenge was won, because the Chemical Brothers-style tracks perfectly amplify the emotional and sometimes tragic scenes.

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Working with Joe Wright seems to have become a regular occurrence.

True! Ed and I worked together on his film Hanna and then I composed the background music for Joe’s adaptation of Bertolt Brecht’s famous play Life of Galileo, an experience I really enjoyed. I like working with Joe: I still remember him when he followed us on our first important tours, all three of us were kids… Suddenly one day he sent me M., Antonio Scurati’s book. I was hooked from the first pages, it’s a fantastic book! I studied history at university and I immediately realized that Joe’s gesture of offering me this reading was a real challenge, because M. is not only a long book but above all dense and profound. Plus, I’ve always been attracted by the history of that period.

So was it easier for you to feel involved in the project?

Yes, but I could also say that making me read M. was also a sort of intimidating act. First of all because I have never worked on a text that deals with a specific historical event, then because the rise of fascism and the figure of Mussolini are certainly not easy historical topics to deal with. Composing this soundtrack was a serious task. I was very excited at the idea of taking on a challenge so different from my previous ones, and for a project that started from such a powerful book.

The compositions you created for the series are very precise in commenting on the scenes in which they are inserted. Did you start working on the sound even before shooting?

That’s right: Joe Wright and I started talking about ideas and musical themes with just the script in hand. It was a long process of ideas, plus I was interacting with a person who is also a true friend in addition to being a great talent. I tried to give shape to his ideas, because this series is the fruit of his vision.

The soundtrack has very rhythmic sound comments – Chemical Brothers style – and not many melodies.

There are melodies! But they are a bit convoluted, they are never obvious. The main theme is all based on a precise and constant rhythm.

The theme is close to the sound of fascist marches but also takes up the ideas of futurism.

Of course, Joe and I discussed the difference and the relationship between noise and music, which was a theme dear to the futurists. I certainly would never have associated a “floral” sound movement with the advent of fascism!

You stated that part of the soundtrack was made by making old acoustic instruments interact with modern electronics.

Right. I developed a system in my studio where I can have total control of all the information I receive by making my technology interact with traditional instruments such as strings and piano. What we were describing musically was a certain past that really happened. When I met Antonio Scurati he was absolutely in agreement with this creative process, as well as the fact that for (this series) all modern electronics were used to tell not an imaginary world but historical facts, the songs often comment on words taken from real speeches by Mussolini.

The tracks are sometimes very short sound comments. Was it difficult to work on them?

Yes, that was also a real challenge. But that’s why I like working on soundtracks: it’s a very different process. I’m also intrigued by being able to comment on the change of emotions during a scene: you can easily go from a sense of calm to one of terror in a few moments, whereas in a song you often try to create only one type of emotion or feeling.

The impression is that in the second part of the series the music becomes increasingly dramatic, as the historical events do.

I tried to musically describe a very complex historical period where a leader conquers the people – part of the population also found Mussolini a funny man – and then comes to total control of the Italian state after the killing of the MP Giacomo Matteotti. I also tried to convey the director’s and writer’s vision: I hope I did it coherently with that.

What do you think of the Oasis reunion?

I’ll be honest: it’s crazy! My kids and their friends are really desperate to get a ticket because that’s a generation that has never seen the Gallagher brothers on stage together. I’ve known Liam and Noel for years, I’ve been to their concerts many times and it’s always been great to be there, but this time the level of hysteria reached to get a ticket here in Great Britain is truly incredible. Speaking of people from Manchester, my kids would love to see The Smiths reunite too!

Which Oasis albums do you like the most?

Whatever age you are, even just 17, Definitely Maybe is still an incredible album: listening to it is as if the songs were speaking directly to you. I’m sure that this effect is triggered also in the new generations. But the second album is not bad either. They are their two masterpieces.

Will we hear new Chemical Brothers music anytime soon?

It’s too early. Ed and I have to take our time, as always. When we release music, we want to make sure it’s music we really love! We’ve never limited ourselves to putting out productions just for the sake of it. And that’s still true today.

The most listened-to artist in Italy in 2024 (according to Luminate) does not, exactly, rap in Italian. Naples’ own Geolier raps in his native dialect — the very musical language spoken on the streets of his neighborhood, Rione Gescal, and now spoken by kids in every corner of Italy who, through Geolier, have learned it.
For the 24-year-old artist born Emanuele Palumbo, that devotion has added up, in the past year alone, to three consecutive sold-out shows at Naples’ Maradona Stadium; a historic appearance bringing the Neapolitan dialect for the first time to the Sanremo Festival, the most important music event in Italy; and triple-platinum certification for his song “Dio Lo Sa,” released in June. Five years after his debut album, Emanuele, Geolier is clearly still taking in this success — as is evident in the way he pauses to reflect on his words in conversation, in his broad smiles in response to compliments and in his lyrics portraying a young man who takes everything (except himself) seriously. He spoke to Billboard Italia about how he arrived here.

Geolier

Vittorio Cioffi

Geolier

Vittorio Cioffi

Did you always know you would be a rapper?

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I didn’t always know this because as kids you can’t predict the future. Obviously I hoped so and imagining myself onstage was the only thing possible, because I didn’t know how to do anything else and I did poorly at school. But I would never have bet on myself. I started working in a factory at a very young age, I continued to rap in my free time, but I saw that [acceptance for the genre was] really far away in Italy. Only pop songs were on the radio back then. I loved rap because I looked up to America, but the maximum that was played in Italy was “In Da Club” on MTV. I admired 50 Cent; I felt close to him.

What did you think you had in common with him?

I saw the film about his life [the semi-autobiographical Get Rich or Die Tryin’], where it is clear that he had taken all the responsibility of the family on his shoulders. He sold crack on the streets of Queens; I never did it, but I started working very young. I found an extraordinary maturity in him and this fascinated me.

When did your own personal turning point come, realizing this could potentially be your career?

I realized I could do this job when they paid me for my first live show. It was about 250 euros but for me it was a lot of money — I was 18 years old. However, I couldn’t say when I reached what can be defined as a milestone.

Geolier

Vittorio Cioffi

Why is this incredible boom in Neapolitan rap happening today?

I come from the ghetto of the ghetto. I think there is a unique realness here; perhaps it’s only possible to find it [elsewhere] in the United States. I think rappers in this city put what they see into their lyrics. The culture of Southern Italy is more known internationally than that of Italy as a whole, also, thanks to TV series such as The Sopranos.

2024 was an incredible year for you, but you experienced some tougher moments as well. At the Sanremo Festival you won the covers night, but the live audience booed you and your guests.

We were there and just tried to defend ourselves. That same night they immediately told me to be careful of potential criticism. I believe that the Sanremo Festival was not ready for rap music; we brought an iconic song for Italy, “Brivido” by Guè featuring Marracash, and the audience booed. Incredible.

Your mother was also in the audience. Did this make it especially painful?

It made me smile, actually. She was furious because she couldn’t do anything, and she wouldn’t even talk to me about it. Even today, when we talk about Sanremo, she has bad memories — but my mother is a normal person and absolutely doesn’t want to be part of the star system.

Were those three sold-out concerts at Maradona Stadium the peak of 2024 for you, or was it something else?

Sure, but I’d say a moment in particular [was] when before the first [of those shows], in the afternoon, I looked through a crack and saw the stadium full. At that moment I thought: “What am I doing?” It was neither a positive nor negative emotion, I had simply never felt it. And I can’t explain it.

Geolier

Vittorio Cioffi

Geolier

Vittorio Cioffi

How do you still stay connected to your roots in your old neighborhood?

I think I do simply because I tell what I see in Naples. I’ll continue to do so even if I have to move away from the city, which is very unlikely. I don’t live that differently now: I continue to see my friends and talk to people. I feel the need also because I want to [be true] with my lyrics. Do you know what normal people tell me the most? Not to take selfies but to remain myself.

If you could choose an American artist to collaborate with, who would they be?

50 Cent. I started making music because of him. But right now I’m also listening to Kendrick Lamar’s new album and I like it a lot.

What do you have coming in 2025?

I just want to do the arena tour, which will start in March, and the two dates at Ippodromo di Agnano in Naples. I don’t think I’ll release new music, apart from some collaborations. I would like to slow down a bit. I think I’ve done a lot, [and] I want to experience this as a game. Because with all the numbers and deadlines, sometimes it seems to have become a routine job. And I surely don’t want that.

Achille Lauro has had many different lives: that of a “street boy” in the Roman crew Quarto Blocco, then as protagonist of the Sanremo Festival and Eurovision Song Contest, a performer in sold-out arenas, entrepreneur and now a judge on The X Factor Italy. He is a person with solid, sincere and passionate convictions, who put their idea of an artist at the center of attention, capable of overlooking everything but never their own abilities and determination. Meeting Achille Lauro for this interview on a nice afternoon in Milan — after the release of his latest single “Amore Disperato,” with the delicate sound of a piano lesson in the background — was just the confirmation of all this.

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As an artist, but not only, you reinvented yourself several times. You are like a cat: you have nine lives.

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I hope, so I still have some to spend! For me, life is always full of opportunities for change. I don’t think I’m the only one. There are people who live just like this, changing their skin and their lives, chasing an idea, aiming for an increasingly distant goal. My curse, but also my blessing, is all of this. I often feel so projected toward the future that I can’t live well in the present. However, this is also my strength: being beyond the contemporary. The worst thing they wrote about me was that I always tried to amaze people, but instead I just tried to surpass myself, often ending up in territories I didn’t know. I don’t want my job to turn into an assembly line.

After all, you are artistically omnivorous and have nothing to defend other than your talent.

I like “omnivorous,” but I believe that talent is ultimately not enough. Dedication toward what you love and extreme commitment count. In the end, all this leads to great results, as well as always seeking innovation. It’s true, I’ve never been afraid of losing anything. Each of my albums is always different from the previous one, because I am looking for a new universe to immerse myself in. I think it was harder initially for a listener to understand my direction. But I’m not reassuring, I don’t want to bring you into a comfort zone by always doing the same thing.

You’ve been on the scene for 10 years, and in this decade, everything has happened musically in Italy: a real generational revolution in the charts, but also the renewal of Sanremo – and you have been the protagonist of the festival several times.

They have been 10 intense years because there has been a great evolution of our music scene, especially thanks to younger artists. Many of them have understood that the more unique and particular they make themselves, the more they strike the chords of the public’s feelings. I’m not even completely convinced that Auto-Tune was the stylistic hallmark of this era. Already in the ’70s funk bands used the Vocoder, then there were Daft Punk in the ’90s…. When I started, it was the era of street rap, in which you had to say certain things and maybe you were ashamed to show your feelings, your weaknesses. Today, however, there is room for emotions, which is very important for me. However, there has been a great evolution in the trap and urban scene. We went from a very dark production to something lighter. Above all, those kids who come from the suburbs didn’t ape the Americans but chose their own narrative path, going much higher in quality. They tell of miserable realities that are in contrast with the luxury that glitters 15 minutes away from them. Milan is the place par excellence to describe this discrepancy. For them, as for me, music is a path to redemption and redemption. Then it’s nice that pop is no longer considered synonymous with poor music, and this allows many young artists to try their hand at this genre without fear.

Achille Lauro

Marcello Junior Dino/Billboard Italy

What do you think about the fact that electronic dance music is connecting more and more with pop? It is a process that began many years ago but continues at a mainstream level in Italy, too.

True. I would like to open the top 50 and hear globally competitive productions and also an acceleration toward the contamination between dance and what really characterizes one’s culture, one’s country. Look at what is happening in Spain with Rosalía or C. Tangana, who take their tradition and mix it with something new.

What are you finding as a judge of The X Factor?

I’m trying to find something strong in identity in my team. My final three choices are slightly unconventional talents. I’m delighted to be able to try to do something different for the program. In the end, in Italy, only The X Factor and Sanremo are left to give great motivation to kids, to new talents…. Only in these contexts does something different and important really happen.

And you know a lot about Sanremo.

Let’s say that I was part of a change for the better. The festival was more permeable to the innovations seen in our music scene. It approached very distant worlds that never paid attention to before. Standing on stage with 10 million people watching you is an opportunity that I have always taken advantage of, even when I made mistakes.

Now, after four times at the festival, would you like to do Sanremo more as a guest or as a competitor?

If I have the right song I would go as a contestant. I love what I do and I want to take it to the top, but not in a grimly economic sense. I’ve always found my way, now I’m also an entrepreneur, I’ve opened a real estate company, so I’m not thinking about Sanremo for an economic question. But I’m ambitious: Sanremo is like the Champions League for a footballer. If you go there, you do it not only to participate but to win.

In your movie Ragazzi Madre: L’Iliade there is a passage where you reveal your great love for ballads, and the new single “Amore Disperato” is an intimate song, with acoustic sounds and a melancholic flavor.

I love ballads because they allow me to talk about my personal stories, to tell my experience, without inventing details to embellish them or make them more authentic. It’s all in that song. I want to maintain a certain simplicity, which for me goes hand in hand with authenticity. “Amore Disperato” is about a true story, so it was very easy for me to make it.

You recently went to the United States and talked about a future collaboration with Arturo Fratini, aka Lester Nowhere. We know he worked with Kanye West after giving him a CD with his phone number.

We did some things together during my work trip to Los Angeles, which was a very interesting and profitable period for me. Lester Nowhere is a very interesting artist and another demonstration that between obsession and attraction something incredible can happen. As in his case: meeting and then working with a great artist like Kanye West.

Achille Lauro

Marcello Junior Dino/Billboard Italy

Milan reconfirmed itself as Italy’s capital of music by hosting the first Italian (and European) edition of Billboard Women In Music, the award ceremony that celebrates the most influential women in the music industry.

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Kickstarting Fashion Week, the event took place Monday (Sept. 16) at Teatro Manzoni, with the patronage of the Municipality of Milan and Camera della Moda, the association of Italian fashion brands.

Opened by a video message from the mayor Giuseppe Sala, the show was hosted by two protagonists of Italian cinema and TV, Cristiana Capotondi and Maurizio Lastrico. With their sympathy and energy, the two hosts introduced the honorees and the special guests who took the stage.

In addition to the awards, the first edition of Billboard Italia Women in Music also saw special performances by Gaia (Hitmaker of the Year, who sang her summer hit, “Sesso e Samba”), emerging talent Bu Cuaron, Federica Abbate (Songwriter of the Year, who sang a medley of some of the biggest hits she wrote for others) and Ariete.

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At the end of the show, Rinascente, Italy’s top luxury store and one of the main partners of Billboard Italia Women In Music, welcomed guests to a spectacular party on the rooftop of the iconic store in Piazza Duomo, where the music continued with DJ sets by Anfisa Letyago (DJ of the Year) and Margherita Grechi and live performances by Alexia and Gaia, who sang “Sesso e Samba” again but this time with the surprise participation of Tony Effe.

Bu Cuarons on September 16 during the first Italian edition of Billboard Women in Music.

Elena Di Vincenzo

In addition to Rinascente itself, the sponsors were Rabanne and Bellissima, which presented the “Stylist of the Year” award.

Radio 105 was the official radio station of Billboard Italia Women in Music and presented the “Hitmaker of The Year” award, in addition to animating both the event at Teatro Manzoni and the aftershow with its speakers and DJs.

Billboard Italia Women in Music was created with the support of the collecting society SIAE (Società Italiana degli Autori ed Editori) and produced in collaboration with Vivo Concerti, with direction by Gianlorenzo Mortgat. Ticketmaster Italia was the ticketing partner of the event.

Below is the complete list of honorees, with the official reasons for their respective awards.

ANNA, Woman of the YearHer new album, Vera Baddie, broke several records, some unbeaten for almost 20 years, occupying the first place in the Italian chart for nine consecutive weeks. Since 2020, she has been breaking down the gender gap in Italian rap like never before.

Laura Pausini, IconShe’s the artist who, more than anyone else, in her 30-year career, has held the flag of Italian music high in the world. A globally recognized talent, Pausini is an artist who, despite having achieved all possible goals, never stops putting herself on the line.

Elodie, Performer of the YearHer tour in the arenas was explosive and entirely sold out, with a live show that was a manifesto of freedom. With two dates in the stadiums already scheduled for next summer in Milan and Naples, she will be the third Italian female artist to take the stage of San Siro Stadium and the first woman to perform at the Maradona Stadium.

Gaia on September 16 during the first Italian edition of Billboard Women in Music.

Elena Di Vincenzo

Gaia, Hitmaker of the Year by Radio 105An artistic vision that leaves nothing to chance and steals nothing from her naturalness. Gaia is synonymous with freedom of expression, in music but not only. This summer she was an absolute protagonist with “Sesso e Samba” feat. Tony Effe. That refrain is exactly what we can’t get out of our heads.

Rose Villain, Impact AwardFrom her debut album Radio Gotham onwards, she has established herself on the Italian charts. Rose Villain has never stopped expressing her opinions, from the topic of environmental sustainability to that of the inequality of treatment between men and women in music and all other professional sectors.

BigMama on September 16 during the first Italian edition of Billboard Women in Music.

Camilla Pisoni

BigMama, BreakthroughWith an explosive participation in the Sanremo Festival, where she honored women with a performance in which the key words were “sisterhood” and “female power,” Italy was able to get to know her music and her personality better. BigMama is the most disruptive revelation of 2024.

Clara, Rising StarA rising star of Italian music, she introduced us to her talent as a singer and as an actress, obtaining impressive results in a very short time, from the success of the TV series Mare Fuori to her participation in the Sanremo Festival. For this reason, Clara is the Rising Star at Billboard Italia Women in Music.

Federica Abbate on September 16 during the first Italian edition of Billboard Women in Music.

Camilla Pisoni

Federica Abbate, Songwriter of the YearHow many hits of the last few years in Italy bear her signature? Many. Federica Abbate is a singer-songwriter who a year ago published her first album of unreleased songs, Canzoni per gli Altri. From pop to rap, everything her pen touches turns to gold. Or rather platinum, and in one case, even diamond.

Anfisa Letyago, DJ of the YearA true pride of the Italian electronic scene, Anfisa Letyago has climbed to the top of the international dance scene with her engaging DJ sets and her sophisticated productions. Now she is touring the world but her heart stays in Naples, a city that never ceases to give her ideas and inspiration.

Marta Salogni, Producer of the YearShe’s the producer and sound engineer who makes Italy proud on a global level. Björk, Depeche Mode, Animal Collective and Bon Iver are just some of the artists who have had the pleasure of having her in the control room. For this reason, Marta Salogni is Producer of the Year of Billboard Italia Women in Music.

Marta Donà, Manager of the YearFrom the courageous choice to start a managerial career on her own, very young, in 2012, to the most recent milestone of Angelina Mango’s victory at the Sanremo Festival, from the strength of her all-female team to the passion she puts in her work: this is why Marta Donà is Manager of the Year of Billboard Italia Women in Music.

Sara Potente, A&R of the YearShe discovered new talents of Italian music and with determination worked alongside them until she achieved the success she deserved. Now she is the director of Numero Uno, the historic label (part of Sony Music Italy) that was founded by legendary Lucio Battisti and songwriter Mogol.

Ramona Tabita, Stylist of the Year by BellissimaShe takes care of the image of some of the most important protagonists of the Italian music scene and beyond. She is a creative consultant for several brands. She is undoubtedly the name that best embodies the connection between music and fashion, and that is why Ramona Tabita is Stylist of the Year by Bellissima.

Milan confirms itself as the Italian capital of music by hosting Billboard Italia Women in Music next week. Billboard’s iconic awards ceremony will be held Monday (Sept. 16) at Teatro Manzoni, one of the cultural symbols of the city. The event is the first local edition of the Billboard format in Europe. The Woman of […]

Billboard Women in Music arrives in Europe for the first time with an edition that celebrates the talent of Italian artists. Billboard Italia Women in Music will be held on Sept. 16 at Milan’s Teatro Manzoni, one of the most prestigious theaters in the city. Both the date and the venue are meant to highlight […]

Milan, Design Week 2024, a big party in a wonderful location with Meduza’s Mattia Vitale at the DJ booth. Waves of people reach the dance floor: first a group of Dutch designers in their 40s dancing with cocktails in hand, then a wave of 20-year-olds raising their hands in the air when they hear the hooks of “Piece of Your Heart” and “Lose Control.” At the end, everyone passionately sings Daft Punk’s “One More Time,” while Mattia has fun playing with the effects. Meduza are capable of making themselves loved by a transversal audience.

If artists like Daft Punk have exported the “French touch” to the rest of the world, then Meduza could be considered flag bearers of the “Italian touch,” the tradition of Italian DJs and producers who have transmitted a certain style in dance music, from Giorgio Moroder to Tale of Us.

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Before the interview, they have some fun commenting on a handful of 12-inch vinyl singles contained in a DJ bag. The eyes of Mattia Vitale, Luca De Gregorio and Simone Giani lit up when looking at the covers of tracks that made the history of dance music. “Groovejet” by Spiller, “Needin’ U” by David Morales, “Music Sounds Better With You” by Stardust, just to mention a few.

Now it’s their turn to speak, in the aftermath of their new single “Fire,” the official anthem of the European football championship.

You have a lot of gigs this summer — more than 40 in three months.

Mattia Vitale: Plus some pre-shows at Cafè Mambo in Ibiza!

Luca De Gregorio: Those are cool. We mix for an hour, sometimes back-to-back with some guests, while the sun sets. In Ibiza we also play at “Our House” parties at Hï.

You are now regulars in Ibiza. Has your audience changed in recent years?

Vitale: In my opinion there is a completely different generation than before, and the average age has dropped a lot.

Simone Giani: The type of music offered is also changing. I could say that it is much more linked to international successes than in the past, when DJs tried to maintain that certain Ibizan identity in the sounds.

Vitale: Obviously in July and August the island becomes much more musically commercial, due to the type of tourists who arrive. But compared to the past, Ibiza has become more open to the demands of what the audience wants. In September, you will also find industry insiders in the clubs and that segment of pure clubbers, true enthusiasts and many Americans. At that time of the season, you can really have fun and feel more free as a DJ.

You are experts at DJing in every situation. What does it mean for you as a DJ to be on the decks at Tomorrowland and then move on to the decks at Lollapalooza, to give two examples?

Vitale: This is all very interesting. I grew up as a resident DJ, so always used to changing the set depending on the audience or the type of evening. For me, the fact that I play in different situations every week also helps myself to be able to work on the tracks, on the edits, and to completely change my perspective. Of course, when you go to play a festival you have to play your own music. We present ourselves as Meduza: we are there because the public expects our performance, with our productions.

Giani: At Tomorrowland, we feel like we are in our natural habitat, within the company of other DJs and producers, while at Lollapalooza we are among bands and artists who do something completely different. It is precisely at that moment that we often feel even more gratified, because our singles played on the radio or streamed online bring together a diverse audience that you often find at festivals, such as Lollapalooza.

The acceptance of dance music at festivals began between 1997 and 1998 with Chemical Brothers and Daft Punk, remember? People who danced to rock began to respect clubbers and mix with them.

De Gregorio: In the last 15 years, electronic music has really exploded as a presence at festivals, as well as having created a circuit of festivals where the genre is dominant. Today, electronic music has the same value as genres such as rock, pop, hip-hop.

Giani: You mentioned the Chemical Brothers. What comes to mind is not only their courage to play at festivals where rock was the main genre, but also the fact that they managed to make a difference! This reminds me of my time at the conservatory: I too did my act of courage by demonstrating my interest and passion for dance music. I remember finding myself mocked most of the time!

Italy has always exported great dance music. Your tracks have a sense for melody that is also the result of this long tradition.

Vitale: Sure. We grew up with Italian pop music from an early age. We feel that legacy emerge when we get into the studio, where we always make a mix of all the experiences we have in our heads. Those melodies become present again.

Giani: I grew up with the songs of Lucio Battisti and Lucio Dalla, for example. From the 17th century onwards, we Italians have been masters of melody.

Vitale: In the ranking of the most listened to Italian authors in the world, there is Vivaldi! Luckily, I’d say.

Giani: I don’t really like very rhythmic DJ sets without melody. I respect “purist” techno DJs, but for me it’s an approach that becomes monotonous after a while. I need breaks, singing and melodies that take you on a journey. That’s what we do in our DJ sets.

Your case is special. Thanks to your hit songs, even the most traditional media play your music, but today many good Italian artists of the electronic scene are not broadcast on radio or TV.

De Gregorio: I can’t explain it. It’s strange, because in Italy in the ’90s, dance music reigned everywhere, becoming a global phenomenon. Then evidently our dance music lost appeal on TV and radio.

Giani: Since then, dance music has often been considered a second-class production.

Yet today many hip-hop, trap and even pop artists flirt a lot with contemporary dance.

Vitale: The thing that really saddens me is that there are artists who gather large audiences with their shows and don’t have visibility elsewhere. Benny Benassi and Tale of Us have a media impact, yet the reaction of the mainstream media is close to zero. There is also a certain lack of respect, if we consider that we are all “children” of Giorgio Moroder, who exported that Italian touch we are talking about to the world. It’s sad to achieve success first abroad and then in Italy. When we enter some recording studios abroad, we see that there are a lot of Italians working there who had to go there to demonstrate their skills. In our country, they didn’t give them a chance.

With your latest single, “Fire,” you worked on commission for the first time.

De Gregorio: You don’t know how many versions we have made. … We have more than a thousand files in one folder! For that track we worked with a great professional, Ryan Tedder of OneRepublic.

The thing that strikes me about your productions is that in seven years, you have produced seven hit songs. On one hand, you are not very prolific, you don’t release a lot of new music. But on the other hand, it is not easy to churn out a sure hit every year.

Vitale: We prefer quality over quantity. Everything that comes out of the studio must be approved and precise. Before starting the interview, we were talking about the vinyl of David Morales’, “Needin’ U”: Before releasing it, he tested it in DJ sets, and only after seeing the public’s reaction did he decide to release it as a single. It is now one of the classics of house music.

De Gregorio: The opposite happened to us. For the third single, after “Lose Control,” we were sure we wanted to release a certain song. It was conceived during the pandemic, so it hadn’t had the opportunity to get played in clubs. After the lockdown, we tested it live. We looked at each other and immediately changed direction. Then we worked on “Paradise.” Testing a track “on field” has always helped us; it’s an advantage of dance music that other genres don’t have.

Meduza

Cosimo Buccolieri/Billboard Italy

–This article originally appeared in Billboard Italy

If the evening of July 17 in Lajatico, Tuscany, celebrating 30 years of Andrea Bocelli‘s career were a film, it would be an American blockbuster. In the Teatro del Silenzio (“Theater of Science”), a fairytale place among the Tuscan hills that only opens once a year and is in its 19th edition, there were big names as guests, an amazing stage, and the most loved Italian songs in the world, including “O Sole Mio” and “Funiculì Funiculà.”
“I tried not to be overwhelmed by emotions,” Bocelli said the next day. “I tried to express them, to convey them through each song, each duet, while maintaining the cold blood necessary to complete this bet, as beautiful as it is large, ambitious and – I can say it now – also a little risky, given the amount of songs, the lineup, the many people involved.”

A guest list like this onstage hadn’t been seen since the times of “Pavarotti and Friends.” In fact, for the first time Bocelli virtually duetted with the image of Luciano Pavarotti, who appeared in a video behind him for “Notte ‘e Piscatore.”

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At “Andrea Bocelli 30 – The Celebration,” the percentage of foreigners was close to 90% of the 12,000 present every evening (July 15, 17 and 19), as explained by Veronica Berti, Bocelli’s wife and organizer of the event. Most of the visitors come from the United States, but also from Congo, Peru, Spain and South America. In many cases these are people who return to the Teatro del Silenzio every year.

Bocelli himself sought the reason for this feeling of affection toward him. “I believe that it is an audience that still knows how to get excited and frankly express its feelings, that is capable of having fun, of being moved, as well as enjoying good music. Every time I go onstage, what I want most is to give back to those present a bit of positivity and serenity, lighting a smile in them, a moment of tenderness. When this impulse of mine is seized, I am happy. Just as I am happy that many return to the Teatro del Silenzio year after year, undertaking long journeys to experience the concert and also what Italy is able to express, from art to cuisine. It is that ‘culture of beauty’ that we sometimes underestimate, but which the whole world loves.”

One of the main reasons that pushed Bocelli to organize such an event in his hometown is to be able to show artists of that level to his fellow citizens. It’s not every day you see José Carreras, Placido Domingo, Ed Sheeran, Lang Lang, Laura Pausini, Tiziano Ferro, Johnny Depp, Will Smith, Russell Crowe and Zucchero on the same stage.

The evening of July 17 was a great celebration for all those who love Italy and its music, not just that of Andrea Bocelli. “I also thought of my parents, to whose memory I dedicated the first edition of the Teatro del Silenzio,” said Bocelli. “I like to think that every note that rose between those hills that they loved so much reached them in heaven.”

The sky was cobalt blue, the moon was in the background, the temperature was perfect as the sun went down. The large orchestra took its place. A child entered the scene and started a record player playing “O Sole Mio” (from Bocelli’s live album Night in Central Park). Bocelli descended from a high silver staircase in the center of the stage, which seemed to point to the sky, starting the show.

The first part had an operatic flavor, apart from the presence of Zucchero, who came onstage already in the fourth piece with “Miserere.” Then came two protagonists of opera: Placido Domingo and José Carreras. Also worth mentioning are the baritone Franco Vassallo and the soprano Nadine Sierra, who gave a very touching moment with “Vicino a Te S’acqueta,” from the opera Andrea Chenier. Meanwhile, the 500 drones above the heads of the audience reproduced a moving starry sky and the staircase became a triangle on which the videos were projected.

The second part of the evening was no less sumptuous. Kicking things off was none other than Will Smith, who performed the lyrics to “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” written by Oscar Greeley Clendenning Hammerstein at the end of World War II with music by Richard Rodgers.

Then Lang Lang arrived. The Chinese pianist played “Ritual Fire Dance,” leaving everyone astonished. Then it was the moment of Virginia, Bocelli’s daughter, who is only 12 years old and had already shown a great love for music. She sang “You Raise Me Up,” a title that couldn’t be more appropriate.

Another exceptional guest took to the stage, a great friend of the host, Laura Pausini. He sat on the piano to accompany Pausini for Charles Aznavour’s “She.” In the end, Pausini wanted to say how all this reminded her of her beginnings at the piano bar, just like Bocelli himself. “At the time we were happy to sing for a few people, as much as we are now to be in front of such a large audience,” she said.

After her, it was Russell Crowe’s turn, who has the perfect vocal timbre and attitude to sing Leonard Cohen’s “Take This Waltz” alone. Then it was the Bocelli brothers’ turn. Matteo sang his “Honesty” accompanied by Amos on the piano.

Bocelli then introduced the next international guest. “One day a guy who was already quite famous and already playing stadiums came to me,” he says. “We recorded a song together, but he let me know that my part wasn’t right. He asked me to do it again, and he was right! That song now has half a billion views on YouTube.” Ed Sheeran came onstage, and together they sang “Perfect Symphony.”

The surprises didn’t end, because Johnny Depp took to the stage as guitarist. He and Bocelli performed a cover of “En Aranjuez con Tu Amor” in honor of their late friend Jeff Beck, who died last year; all three played it together in 2020. At the end of the performance, Johnny Depp said how important it was to play that piece, which made you imagine that Jeff was there with them.

Finally, Laura Pausini returned to the stage, this time in a duet with Tiziano Ferro on “Invece No.”

The three evenings of “Andrea Bocelli 30 – The Celebration” will become a film with the same title, directed by Grammy nominee and Emmy Award winner Sam Wrench.

The album Duets (Decca Records / Sugar Music) will be released Oct. 25 and will bring together many of the collaborations of the last three decades, but also new songs, for a total of 32 tracks. The album will feature duets with Ed Sheeran, Céline Dion, Sarah Brightman, Dua Lipa, Jennifer Lopez, Giorgia and Luciano Pavarotti, and new duets recorded specifically for this album with Shania Twain, Chris Stapleton, Gwen Stefani, Marc Anthony, Karol G , Sofia Carson, Lauren Daigle, Elisa, Matteo Bocelli and Hans Zimmer.

At the end of the year, the documentary Andrea Bocelli: Why I Believe will also be released, telling his story from his beginnings in piano bars until today. In the winter, Bocelli will be on tour in North America, for 10 dates in San Diego, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, Uncasville and Miami, as well as returning to New York’s iconic Madison Square Garden York for two concerts. The tour will begin in San Diego on Nov. 4 and conclude in Miami on Dec. 22.