
Flavio Giurato profile
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Flavio Giurato, born in Rome in 1949. First album, Per Futili Motivi, 1978. Two more albums released in the Eighties while and after experiencing the London pop music scene for a period: Il Tuffatore, 1982 and
Marco Polo, 1984. Both albums - mature and daring, as far as lyrics and arrangements are concerned - are concept albums and can boast international collaborations with progressive rock artists like King Crimson Mel Collins and Ray Cooper, and feature Italian guitarist Piero Tievoli, a long time friend of Giurato's and a talented, inspired musician. A couple of videoclips (amongst the first produced in Italy) were shot at the time of Il Tuffatore and were launched by avant-garde tv program "Mister Fantasy".

The title track of Il Tuffatore is sung part in Italian part in English; here, the powerful image of the high diver re-emerging to the light and air after his performance orchestrates and subsumes the spirit of the whole work, in which situations sometimes lyric, sometimes cryptic, sometimes social are sung in a well balanced mixture of acoustic and electric ebb and flows. In the album, the way the songwriter manipulates the song genre by discarding and expanding its boundaries through the relevance accorded to well wrought instrumental pieces is unique. Echoes, cultural and historical allusions, and embedded quotations are often a characteristic of Giurato's song- and music-writing, a creative effort that reached its apex of complexity and impassionate coherence with Marco Polo.
Unfortunately, Marco Polo did not sell well due to its utterly experimental and peculiar character, and Giurato, not willing to compromise with the music market, decided to give up performing in public and publishing music, turning to the field of television production and disappearing as a songwriter and singer for more than twenty years. His albums became rarities in the world of record collecting and his cult was kept alive by few fans scattered in Italy and Europe who finally gathered around a website with his name, promoted and edited by a fan and friend.

Little by little, Giurato re-emerged from silence; in 2001 the album Il manuale del cantautore, featuring new songs, was released. Some gigs or happenings followed in small Italian places, in which Giurato proved never to have really given up composing, writing, researching, thinking about music. In 2004, a young Milanese publishing house published a cdbook, Il Tuffatore. Racconti e opinioni su Flavio Giurato, that is a book containing tributes to Giurato and his music written by young Italian authors who were adolescents at the time of Giurato's first albums, and had never forgotten his songs in which the sophistication of arrangements, the maturity and literary feel of lyrics and the vigour of Flavio's voice were paramount. The cdbook contained also a live cd with songs old and new performed acoustic either together with Piero Tievoli in an unforgettable gig in Costa Valle Imagna (Bergamo) or "solo" in Milano.
Giurato is now working at a new album that should be ready soon and is probably bound to bring the songwriter and performer from Rome back on the music scene, and, hopefully, should also ratify the reassessment of his work as a fundamental r-evolution in the world of Italian songwriting and performing.

Giurato's music is unique and, different from all other contemporary songwriters, Flavio can't be labelled as belonging to a "school" among those existing in Italy (the "Genovese" featuring Fabrizio De André, Ivano Fossati...; the "Roman" featuring De Gregori, Venditti...and others), on the contrary, his electric, punk-rock-progressive-new wave bent seem more in tune with international and especially British atmospheres and sonorities, and, above all, it is coherent with a musical world all of Giurato's own conception, in which Mediterranean culture, landscape and imagery play a prominent, poetic role. His upbringing in a cosmopolitan milieu and his being bilingual, moreover, add to the exceptionality of his production. |

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