There are seemingly insignificant signs that tell us a lot about who we are. For example music. In early June in Milan Elton John he did his last concert: seeing him on stage he didn’t seem ready for farewell. He was divine. A few days later in Rome Venditti and De Gregori they inflamed the Olimpico and made me re-sing my adolescence under the sign of pisces. Staying at the concerts I could also mention Vasco Rossi and the Rolling Stones of course, but I wasn’t there. Epper the most listened to song in the world in June was an old 80’s hit Kate Bush brought back to life by a scene from a Netflix TV series.
Musica
Running Up the Charts, come Kate Bush ha conquistato Spotify grazie a Stranger Things
by Emanuele Capone
Meanwhile, a big movie has been dominating the cinema for days Elvis Presley. While the most widely read Italian weekly celebrated last week on the cover Raffaella Carrà. How much we miss, he said she.
Some say that there is a great nostalgia in the air, and that memories are erasing innovation and therefore the future and that a lot also depends on age issues: baby boomers, those born in the 60s, are many and this would also explain why on platforms like Spotify the streaming of the music of the past grows more than that of new music. We listen to old hits. It will also be so.
From hi-fi and Bluetooth
The new life of music, at the time of the pandemic and beyond
by Antonio Dini
But I I don’t know if it’s just nostalgia, or fear of the future. At the Olimpico my teenage daughter sang with me that Venditti and De Gregori have just discovered. The Netflix TV series tells the story of a group of kids. And the main Elvis song is a cover sung by Damiano of Maneskin. Maybe simply beautiful things do not go away, like the memories of the people we have loved so much.
Generation 56 K: the internet and the world of the future seen from the past
by Lorenzo Fantoni