Cantodiscanto come out with the new album Pandemusica. There are significant collaborations
with artists, old and new fellow travelers who have given their contribution by working at a distance,
when conditions did not allow to meet. The basic quintet composed of Guido Sodo (string
instruments and voice), Frida Forlani (voice), Ivan Valentini (sax), Giovanni Calcaterra (double
bass) Paolo Caruso (percussion, drums, berimbau and santoor), are joined by the vocalist Maria
Anadon (Lisbon), together with cellist Davide Zaccaria and Portuguese guitarra player Fernando
Jorge Silva; Marco Cappelli (New York) on electric guitar; Riccardo Tesi (Tuscany) on accordion,
palestinian singer Faisal Taher, Fabio Sodano on ney and balaban and Simone Zanchini on
accordion from the nearest Romagna. To complete the picture of the guests, in the Bologna area there are Maurizio Piancastelli on flugelhorn, Andrea Taravelli on fretless bass, Elio Pugliese on
accordion, Mirco Mungari on frame drums, and the Stelutis Choir directed by Silvia Vacchi. The
music belongs to an ethnic-acoustic vein, with references to Portuguese fado, Brazilian music and
ancient and popular music from the South and the Mediterranean. Guido Sodo, Paolo Caruso, Frida
Forlani and Faisal Taher composed them.
As for the lyrics, the group continues its multicultural path: there is a good presence of the Portuguese,
thanks to the collaboration with the writer and journalist residing in Lisbon Marcello Sacco, who
was freely inspired to Livro do Desassossego by Fernando Pessoa.
There is the usual use of Neapolitan, the mother tongue of Guido Sodo who wrote the rest of the
lyrics, but this time he used Italian in several passages, even in the archaic invented form of the piece
that gives the name to the CD, which metaphorically compares the desire to do a new job with the
preparation of bread in an old oven. Finally, there is a text by Janna Carioli that talks about violence
against women, a phenomenon that unfortunately was exasperated during the period of the forced
lock down.
One of the songs, Dimentica, returns in an unreleased rap punctuated by the tambourine the
frustration that we all felt a little bit. For this song we wanted to insert a more condensed Radio edit
version of the song at the end of the playlist.