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Vasco Rossi Discografia Completa Download Utorrent

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Vasco Rossi (born February 7, 1952) is an Italian singer-songwriter. His nickname is Blasco. G Sonique Ultrabass Mx4 4 Vst Plugin. During his 25-year career, he has published 21 albums (including live and collection discs) and has written some 130 songs, as well as lyrics for other artists. He calls himself a 'provoca(u)tore' (an Italian portmanteau for 'provoking author') as throughout his career he has been regularly criticized over his choice of lifestyle and the lyrics in his songs. Rossi was born in Zocca, in the province of Modena (Emilia-Romagna). Crack Rar Password Fast here. His father, Carlo Rossi, was a truck-driver, and his mother, Novella, a famous housewife. It was his mother herself who decided to enroll him in singing school when he was a small boy, a choice that must have seemed rather peculiar within the mentality of a small village in the Apennines like Zocca.

Clutch Hive Mediafire Downloader. Nonetheless, Rossi fell in love with music and at the age of 14 began playing with his first band. Rossi and his family moved to Bologna, Italy, where he studied accounting in high school. Upon graduating he opened a music club, Punto Club, and enrolled in university at the faculty of Economics and Commerce, and later Education. In the meantime he supported himself by working as a DJ and founding, along with friends, one of the first private radio stations in Italy, 'Punto Radio', with which he began slowly and timidly showcasing his own songs. Encouraged by his friend Gaetano Curreri (now leading member of Stadio), Rossi released his first EP on June 13, 1977, which included the songs 'Jenny Φ pazza' (Jenny is Crazy) and?Silvia', and a full-length album in 1978, Ma cosa vuoi che sia una canzone. In 1979, he released a second album, Non siamo mica gli americani ('It's Not Like We Are American'), which included, 'Albachiara', one of his biggest hits, and a ballad considered emblematic of Rossi?s poetic style. His most controversial album, Colpa d'Alfredo ('Alfredo's fault') followed in 1980; its title-track was censored from the radio and let loose bitter criticism because it contained lyrics such as troia ('bitch') and stronza ('asshole', referring to a female subject) in a period in which music censorship was widely practiced in Italy.