Nomadi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nomadi (or I Nomadi, meaning "Nomads") is an Italian band formed in 1963 and still present on the music scene.

Contents

[edit] Career

[edit] Origins

In 1961 Beppe Carletti and Leonardo Manfredini formed the group I Monelli (‘Urchins’). In 1962 Carletti met Franco Midilli, guitarist of the group Novellara, who joined them in Monelli. In 1963 Franco Midilli introduced Augusto Daolio to Beppe Carletti and he too joined the group. In that year the band’s name was changed to Nomadi .

[edit] I Nomadi of Augusto Daolio

I Nomadi sprung from one of the most fervent periods of the Italian music scene: the sixties. In those years tens if not hundreds of groups appeared and disappeared, characterised by the atmosphere of the years after the Italian boom which revealed an Italy economically enriched but already socially impoverished, in which the youth were beginning to feel repressed by a society still permeated with antiquated conventions.

The original 1963 formation of six was founded in Reggio Emilia: Augusto Daolio (vocals), Beppe Carletti (keyboards), Franco Midili (guitar), Leonardo Manfredini (drums), Gualtiero Gelmini (sax), Antonio Campari (bass). In the same year Nomadi were signed by Frankfurt Bar in Riccione.

Franco Midilli had to leave the group that summer for compulsory military service. As often happens, the lineup changed frequently: in 1964 Madfredini left after the tragic death of his parents, as well as Campari and Gelmini, which were replaced by Gabriele ‘Bila’ Copellini on drums and Gianni Coron on bass.

In 1965 they released their first 45", featuring the song "Donna, la prima donna" ("Woman, the First Woman") and "Giorni tristi" ("Sad Days") with the collaboration of De Ponti and of Odoardo Veroli (known as Dodo) as writer and composer.

Their first hit was 1966's "Come potete giudicar" (How Can You Judge), anthem of the Italian beat generation, which exemplifies the clash between hippies and conservatives. In the wake of this success they came into contact with a young and then unknown writer, Francesco Guccini, who would go on to give them other successes: "Noi non ci saremo" ("We Won't Be There"), "Dio è morto" ("God is Dead"), "Canzone per un'amica" ("Song for a Friend").

In the following years great success continued with a list of hits including "Io Vagabondo" ("I, Vagabond"), "Un pugno di sabbia" ("A Fistful of Sand"), "Un giorno insieme" ("One Day Together"), "Tutto a posto" ("Everything Settled"), "Voglio ridere" ("I Want to Laugh").

Their political commitment is particularly evident in some songs such as "Primavera di Praga" ("Prague Spring"), dedicated to Jan Palach and also written by Guccini.

[edit] The "new" Nomadi

In 1990 Cico Falzone and Daniele Campani joined the group, on guitar and drums respectively. In 1992 bass player Dante Pergreffi was killed in a car crash on May 14th and then, on October 7, Augusto Daolio, the band's frontman and icon, died of an aggressive form of stomach cancer. Despite the shock and despair of their many fans, the group decided to continue with Danilo Sacco doing vocals, Francesco Gualerzi on wind and vocals and Elisa Minari on bass. Gualerzi and Minari left the group at the end of 1997 and were replaced by Massimo Vecchi and Andrea Pozzoli, who took part in the summer tour of that year and was then replaced by Sergio Reggioli, enchanting on violin. The new lineup convinced the fans and Nomadi continue even now to release new albums.

[edit] 40th anniversary

In 2003 Nomadi celebrated their 40th year as a band with a three-day show at Riccione followed by three more concerts and other events related to the past and the future of the group.

[edit] The music and the message

The message that Nomadi has promoted from its beginning is of denunciation and social commitment, clean and never too political. They carry it throughout Italy, even in the smallest towns.

Their sound is instantly recognisable for its cleaness and simpleness, even if some arrangements on the old albums tended to be a bit overblown as was typical of the 1960s in general.

In 2003 they released Quaranta (Forty), a double CD with 34 tracks. In 2005 the new album Corpo Estraneo (Foreign Body) came out and went platinum just on advance sales. The single Oriente (East) was successful on many radio stations and the tour sold out every show.

They came first in the Groups category of the 2006 Sanremo Music Festival with the track Dove si Va (Where Does One Go).

The new album Con Me o Contro di Me (With Me or Against Me) came out at the beginning of March 2006 and sold 90,000 copies in the first four days, going platinum.

[edit] Members

[edit] Discography

  • Per quando noi non ci saremo (1967)
  • I Nomadi (1968)
  • Mille e una sera (1971)
  • So che mi perdonerai (1971)
  • Io vagabondo (1972)
  • Un giorno insieme (1973)
  • I Nomadi cantano Guccini (1973)
  • I Nomadi interpretano Guccini (1974)
  • Canzoni d'oltremanica e d'oltreoceano (1974)
  • Tutto a posto (1974)
  • Gordon (1975)
  • Collezione (1976)
  • Noi ci saremo (1977)
  • Naracauli e altre storie (1978)
  • Album concerto (1979)
  • I Nomadi (1980)
  • I Nomadi 1 (1981)
  • Sempre Nomadi (1981)
  • Ancora una volta con sentimento (1982)
  • I Nomadi 2 (1983)
  • Ci penserà poi il computer (1985)
  • Quando viene sera (1986)
  • Nomadi in concerto (1987, double live)
  • I Nomadi 3 (1987)
  • Ancora Nomadi (1988)
  • Solo Nomadi (1990)
  • Gente come noi (1991)
  • Ma noi no (1992)
  • Ma che film la vita (1992)
  • Contro (1993)
  • EMI Music Collection - I Nomadi (1993, collection)
  • Chiedi chi erano i Nomadi (1994)
  • La settima onda (1994)
  • Tributo ad Augusto (1995, collection)
  • La musica dei '70 - La rabbia, l'amore, la poesia (1995, collection)
  • Lungo le vie del vento (1995)
  • Quando ci sarai (1996)
  • D'amore e altre storie (1997)
  • Le strade, gli amici, il concerto (1997)
  • Una storia da raccontare (1998)
  • In Italia erano i Nomadi (1998)
  • SOS con rabbia e con amore (1999)
  • Liberi di volare (2000)
  • Amore che prendi amore che dai (2002)
  • Nomadi 40 (2003)
  • The platinum collection (2003, collection)
  • Corpo estraneo (2004)
  • Con Me o Contro di Me (2006)

[edit] External links

In other languages