Create account Log in

1,0

[Edit]

Download links and information about 1,0 by Fiamma Fumana. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Electronica, World Music, Celtic genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 47:43 minutes.

Artist: Fiamma Fumana
Release date: 2001
Genre: Electronica, World Music, Celtic
Tracks: 11
Duration: 47:43
Buy on iTunes $10.89

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. 1,0 (Album version) 4:20
2. Hypnananna (Album version) 4:13
3. Tre sorelle (Album version) 3:52
4. Mare oceano (Album version) 3:38
5. Di Madre In Figlia (Album version) 4:06
6. Quattro piemontesi (Album version) 4:06
7. Incantata (Album version) 5:54
8. L.I.L.T. (Album version) 4:04
9. Walking song (Album version) 5:01
10. Via del Ritorno (Album version) 3:56
11. Hypnananna (acustica) [Album version] 4:33

Details

[Edit]

The programmed drums kick in at 132 bpm and then out of the blue come the Scottish war pipes — not exactly what you'd expect from a North Italian band. But on their debut (lightly-rejigged for U.S. release from the homeland version), Fiamma Fumana often find connections between their native Emilia region and Celtic music, not only on the title track, but very noticeably on "Walking Song," whose rhythms and melodies owe a great deal to the Scots waulking tradition. Singer Fiamma has a strong, often seductive voice in her tales of strong women, while there's a warm gentleness and tenderness in her handling of the lullaby "Hypnananna." Bandmates Bertoni and Cottica work marvelously well together, balancing ancient and modern textures, never allowing one to overwhelm the other, while the additional guests offer instrumental coloration for the music. The highpoint, though, has to be the traditional "4 Piedmontese," as rife with bandits as any Western, where the village song and new beats blend seamlessly into an intoxicating whole that stands outside time. One the few occasions when rhythm swamps melody, things get lumpy, but for the most part they succeed in their efforts to create a new Italian folk sound, with the Celtic connection (a perfectly valid one) offering accessibility to the listener. The remix of the title track, tagged on at the end, is very club-friendly, while popping it into your computer brings up a video for "Tre Sorelle."