Massimo Bubola
Massimo Bubola | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | 15 March 1954 |
Origin | Terrazzo, Italy |
Genres | Rock, Folk rock |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar |
Years active | 1976 – today |
Labels | Philips, Mercury, CGD, Dischi Ricordi, Fado, Produttori Associati, Eccher Music |
Website | Official website |
Massimo Bubola (15 March 1954) is an Italian singer-songwriter, record producer and arranger.
During his career, he cooperated with lot of Italian musicians in writing lyrics and musics, and his most significant cooperation was with Fabrizio De André.[1][2] As author, Bubola cooperated also with Milva, the , Mauro Pagani, Fiorella Mannoia,[3] Cristiano De André, Kaballà and Grazia Di Michele.[1]
Biography and career[]
Born in Terrazzo, a commune in the Province of Verona, he started writing songs very young. After the interest of the record producer , in 1976 he published his first album (yellow ribbon). In 1978 Bubola started his cooperation with Fabrizio De André, writing with him the lyrics of the album Rimini and, in 1981, of the album Fabrizio De André.[1]
In his third album , published in 1981, Bubola received the cooperation of Fabrizio De André as artistic producer, Dori Ghezzi and Cristiano De André as chorister and Mauro Pagani as flute singer.[2]
Despite of his cooperations with several musicians, he continued writing lyrics for his albums, publishing in 1982 and in 1989. , published in 1996, is an anthology in which Bubola performs some songs of De André, Fiorella Mannoia and of the .
His first live album, , was published in 3 volumes in 2001, 2002 and 2004. , published in 2005, is a concept album based on First World War and dedicated to his great uncles, who died during the conflict. His latest album, , with 11 new songs, was published on 22 January 2013.
Discography[]
- (1976)
- (1979)
- (1981)
- (1982)
- (1989)
- (1994)
- (1996)
- (1997)
- (1999)
- (2001)
- (2001, 2002, 2004)
- (2003)
- (2004)
- (2005)
- (2007)
- [4] (2008)
- (2008)
- (2008)
- (2009)
- (2010)
- (2013)
Literature[]
- : "Massimo Bubola – Viaggiando con zingari o re". Editrice Zona, 2001 – ISBN 88-87578-26-5[5]
- Matteo Strukul: "Il cavaliere elettrico". Meridiano Zero, 2008 – ISBN 978-88-8237-170-8[6]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c (in Italian) Discography of Massimo Bubola Archived 22 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Jump up to: a b (in Italian) Massimo Bubola on viadelcampo.com
- ^ (in Italian) He is, for example, the author of Il cielo d'Irlanda -The sky of Ireland-: Article on ottopagine.net Archived 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Reprint of 1979 album with 2 unpublished songs
- ^ (in Italian) Article on editricezona.it
- ^ (in Italian) Bibliography about Massimo Bubola
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Massimo Bubola. |
- (in Italian) Massimo Bubola official site
- (in Italian) Article about Massimo Bubola on ondarock.it
- 1954 births
- Living people
- Italian singer-songwriters
- Italian folk singers
- People from the Province of Verona
- Italian record producers
- Italian music arrangers