Mauro Scocco
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Mauro Scocco (born September 11, 1962 in Stockholm, Sweden) is a Swedish pop artist. He was the singer for the pop group Ratata in the 1980s and has been a solo artist since. He has been described as "one of the sharpest songwriters in Sweden".[1]
Scocco grew up in Stockholm and in Borås. He formed the pop group Ratata in 1980 along with a few classmates while he was still in school. The first single was "För varje dag" ("For each day") released on the debut album Ratata in 1981.
After Ratata he started a successful solo career and have released many songs that have reached top positions on the Swedish charts; "Sarah", "Vem är han?" ("Who is he?"), "Till de ensamma" ("For the lonely"), "Nelly" and "Överallt" ("Everywhere") are among the most recognized. Besides being a solo artist he also writes and produces music for other pop singers, of which Lisa Nilsson is the most famous. Scocco wrote "Himlen runt hörnet" ("Heaven around the corner") for her and it became a monster hit in Sweden in the early 1990s that made her career sky rocket.
Scocco started the record label Diesel Records that was later sold to Playground.
In 1991 Scocco released an album with instrumental piano music, Det Sjungande Trädet ("The singing tree"), with inspiration from Erik Satie and expressionistic art.
In the spring of 2004, Scocco was a disc jockey in the talkshow Sen kväll med Luuk on TV4, in line with the dry, ironic humour of the show.
In the fall of 2005 Scocco released the single "Kall Stjärna" ("Cold star") from the album Herr Jimsons äventyr ("The adventures of Mr. Jimson"), which made it to the top list over downloaded singles on iTunes.
[edit] Discography
Albums:
- Mauro Scocco (1988)
- Dr. Space Dagbok (1990)
- Det Sjungande Trädet (1991)
- Ciao! (1992)
- 28 Grader i Skuggan (1994)
- Godmorgon Sverige (1996)
- Hits (1997)
- Tillbaks Till Världen (1999)
- Beat Hotel (2003)
- La Dolce Vita - Det Bästa 1982-2003 (2003)
- Herr Jimsons Äventyr (2005)
[edit] References
- ^ Hvidfeldt, Anders. "Mauro Scocco – Hits (review)", Aftonbladet, 1997-11-14. Retrieved on 2007-01-03. (in Swedish language)
[edit] External links
- Official homepage (Swedish lang.)