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Volume 8 is an album released by Italian singer/songwriter Fabrizio De André. It was first issued in 1975 on Ricordi and then re-released by BMG. According to statements by De André within his posthumous autobiography "Una goccia di splendore" ["A drop of brightness"], released in 2011, his collaboration with Francesco De Gregori, which gave birth to four of the eight songs on the album, originated when De André saw his colleague live on stage in Rome and was very impressed. Afterwards, he invited De Gregori to visit him in his rural house in Sardinia, where the two of them spent a month "getting drunk together and writing songs in the meantime."

Volume 8
Studio album by
Released1975
RecordedMilan, Ricordi studios, 1975
Length32:51
LabelRicordi
BMG
ProducerRoberto Dané
Fabrizio De André chronology
Canzoni
(1974)
Volume 8
(1975)
Rimini
(1978)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Track listing


All songs written by Fabrizio De André and Francesco De Gregori, except where indicated.

  1. "La Cattiva Strada" – 4:33
  2. "Oceano" – 3:11
  3. "Nancy" (Leonard Cohen, translation by De André) – 3:57
  4. "Le Storie di ieri" (Francesco De Gregori) – 3:15
  5. "Giugno '73" (De André) – 3:31
  6. "Dolce Luna" – 3:25
  7. "Canzone per l'estate" – 5:21
  8. "Amico fragile" (De André) - 5:29

The songs


All of the songs on the album marked a stylistic shift in De André's lyrics, which became more poetical, more complex and less immediate than anything he released earlier. Reviewers at the time criticized the changes, and attributed them to the influence of De Gregori, who was known for writing stylized, not-readily-understandable lyrics which he was not always able to explain. Still, "Giugno '73" and "Amico fragile" were both written by De André on his own before he met De Gregori, and feature the same linguistic and poetical depth as the rest of the album. He would return to his usual storytelling style on his next album, Rimini, co-written with the Veronese folk songwriter Massimo Bubola.


Personnel



References


  1. Allmusic review
  2. In a spoken introduction from a 28 November 1975 live performance in Brescia, De André jokingly states that the song "was written for and about a friend of [his], called Jesus Christ." [I concerti 2012 box set, CD 2, track 15.]
  3. Throughout the song, the person described in the lyrics is referred to as "you".
  4. From Fabrizio De André in English, a blog containing translations into English of De André's entire œuvre.
  5. The tune to which De André improvised his bawdy lyrics is not known, but it bore no resemblance to "Amico fragile", entirely written afterwards. The 2018 biopic Fabrizio De André: Principe libero [i.e. "Free prince"] includes a scene where the singer, portrayed by Luca Marinelli, sings a parody of "Il pescatore" using vulgar, scurrilous lyrics.
  6. The story behind the song was told by Cristiano De André in two separate orccasions: first as a voice-over narrator for the 2011 8-DVD anthology/documentary series Dentro Faber ["Inside Faber"], about De André's life and works (his account of "Amico fragile" is within the fifth disc of the series, L'anarchia - "Anarchy"), and later in an interview excerpt featured in the short documentary video Filming Around Tour, about his 2009-2010 tribute tour, released as a bonus DVD with a live album recorded during the tour.



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