Artist's albums
Disco X
2023 · album
SCRUPOLI
2023 · EP
TUTTA
2023 · single
Tik Tak
2022 · single
Il mio nemico invisibile (feat. Rancore)
2020 · single
La terra sotto i piedi
2019 · album
Prima che
2019 · single
L'ultimo desiderio
2019 · single
Blitz gerontoiatrico
2019 · single
Argentovivo (feat. Rancore & Manuel Agnelli)
2019 · single
Tempi Modesti
2019 · single
Complimenti ignoranti
2019 · single
Acrobati
2016 · album
Quali alibi
2016 · single
Tutta colpa di Freud (Il giardino di Psiche)
2014 · single
S.C.O.T.C.H. Deluxe Edition
2012 · album
S.C.O.T.C.H. Ultra Resistant Edition
2011 · album
S.C.O.T.C.H.
2011 · album
Monetine
2008 · album
Gino E L'Alfetta
2007 · single
Il Latitante
2007 · album
La Paranza
2007 · single
Mi Persi
2007 · single
Livre Transito
2004 · album
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Biography
Daniele Silvestri emerged as one of the premier exponents of the Italian rock renaissance of the 1990s. His generally good-natured, expressive pop/rock balances social awareness, playful experimentation with a variety of styles, and a focus on songcraft. After releasing his self-titled debut in 1994, his sixth album, 2007's Il Latitante, was his first to land in Italy's Top Five, aided by the chart-topping single "La Paranza." Two albums later, 2016's Acrobati went all the way to number one. The son of noted writer Albert Silvestri, Daniele was born in Rome on August 18, 1968. As a teen he played keyboards in a Duran Duran cover band, and after spending his early twenties backpacking across Europe, he returned home to cut his eponymous 1994 debut LP. Silvestri first attracted significant media attention a year later when he appeared at the famed San Remo Festival. Judges awarded his original "L'Uomo Col Megafono" the Premio Volare, a prize given to the song with the best lyrics. In late 1995, he issued his sophomore LP, Prima di Essere un Uomo, a critical favorite that proved a fixture of end-of-year Top Ten lists. From there, Silvestri scored the Giuseppe Piccioni film Cuori al Verde, followed by his breakthrough double LP, Il Dado, which launched the fan-favorite "Cohiba," a song dedicated to Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara. Silvestri spent much of 1997 on tour in the rock opera FrankensteIN musical, not releasing his follow-up LP, Sig. Dapatas, until two years later. In 2002, he returned to the San Remo Festival in support of Unò-Dué, claiming the esteemed Mia Martini Award with "Salirò," which emerged as the year's most-played song on Italian radio. Silvestri published his first novel, L'Autostrada, in 2003, and a year later released his first live LP, Livre Trânsito. Il Latitante followed in 2007, with the 35-track compilation Monetine arriving in 2008. In December 2009, he participated in a mass protest against then-Italian president Silvio Berlusconi with the song "L'imperatore Tiberio" ("the emperor Tiberius"). The LP S.C.O.T.C.H., which also addressed the socio-political state of his country, saw release in 2011. That year his single "Il Viaggio (Pochi Grammi di Coraggio)" was featured in the film comedy Immaturi. An EP titled Che Nemmeno Mennea appeared in 2013 in conjunction with his participation in that year's San Remo Festival. Meanwhile, amid touring, ongoing collaborations with other Italian musicians, and public political engagement, Silvestri prepared his first full-length of new material in five years. Acrobati was released in early 2016 and became the songwriter's first number one album. Ninth long-player La Terra Sotto i Piedi followed in 2019 and debuted at number two. ~ Jason Ankeny & Marcy Donelson, Rovi