TRAKS MAGAZINE TraKs Magazine #1 | Page 14

interview pioneer of Italian ragamuffin Papa Ricky. With producer and bassist Ezra Alessio “Alessiomanna” Argenteri (both already in the ranks of Casino Royale) she is then landed to a solo career with the albums Shape of Fear and Bravery (2009) and One Is A Crowd (2013). What differentiates the work in "Lacework" from your earlier records? Besides the fact that "Lacework" is the first of my disks that is born from a piano, in this third album has seen the work only of Ezra and me, excluding the mastering of the tracks for which we have entrusted to Joseph Ielasi. You chose to use for the first time the piano. Can you explain why? The piano was actually used to compose, with the intention to rearrange everything later with synthesizers and machines, but in some parts it sounded so good that we decided to keep it. There was no premeditation in fact. You wrote lyrics in Thailand, Brixton and Bologna: what did you found in those locations? 14 In Koh Tao I found the quiet and time to think, meditate, read. Brixton, and London in general, have certainly enriched my English vocabulary and Bologna finally gave me what gives me every day, that is the ability to receive many stimulations that come from suffering of mine or my friends’. In short, my town is the primary source of the stories that are mentioned in the songs of the disc. How did you write "King of Fools"? King of Fools comes from the observation of some people close to me, alas, unable to live in the present and see the beauty in things. They are looking at the earth from a distant island unattainable in the sea. Can you tell the main instruments you used? Quite simply my instrument is the voice, but I imagine this is not the answer you need, then I will tell you that after writing the frames of the songs on the piano, an old grinding wheel of the early '900 played amiably by Ezra, the whole thing was rearranged in an electronic key. For rhythms Ezra used an old Akai sampler and a synth for the Teenage Engineering OP-1 and a Kawai sx 240, also working a lot on the effects to try to make sounds deeper and dilated. LACEWORK THE REVIEW T he first track is Billie, and immediately it presents the new sound of this record: the piano. The song has a high pace and a catchy good harmony. Richer in effects but also in some ways more minimalist Pure Rapture, with odd beat and some new wave impressions. King of Fools softens the tone, although a mock organ gives to listeners a bit of concern. The Abacist, strong and dark, has a step once again underlined by the piano. Wall of Mist pursues the road of heavy percussion. Sensual ethnic moves characterize the following Wide Blue Yonder, giving feelings that may call into question Massive Attack or smooth pop music of 80s. Anthemusa arises quite differently from the rest of the record, with the voice of Suz that stands statuesque right from the start. Dramatic piano lines shore the notes of Lethe, where is apparent a certain amount of resentment. Testing of Gold also sounds very dark, as if towards the end of the album the lights tends to fade, and negative feelings got the upper hand. Neither the mood improves with Still Water, which again hinges on percussion and combines the contrasts. There is a consistent rhythmic speech innervating all the pieces of Lacework and building the structure on which the voice of Suz now lies, now stands. A hard and polished elegance that does confirm the good that it was already known about the singer from Bologna. 15