Tre Allegri Ragazzi Morti | |
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The band uses a skull mask during all concerts |
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Background information | |
Origin | Pordenone, Italy |
Genres | Punk rock Pop punk Alternative rock Post punk |
Years active | 1994 - present |
Labels | La Tempesta |
Associated acts | Derozer, Punkreas |
Website | treallegriragazzimorti.it |
Members | |
Davide Toffolo Enrico Molteni Luca Masseroni |
Tre allegri ragazzi morti (Three happy dead boys, in italian) is an italian punkrock band formed in Pordenone, Friuli Venezia Giulia, in 1994. Their name is often abbreviated to TARM.
Contents |
Guitarist and comic artist Davide Toffolo started to play music in the late '70s, when Pordenone became one of the most important cities for the Italian punk rock scene, due to its closeness to the american military base of Aviano.[1] At the time, there was a movement of young musicians called Great Complotto, which gave birth to several small punk rock and new wave groups. They all had a short life, but the line-up of one of them, Futuritmi (1983–1990), featured Davide Toffolo and Gian Maria Accusani, leader of the later famous band Prozac+.
Tre Allegri Ragazzi Morti were formed in this state of ferment by Toffolo and drummer Luca Casta (stage name of Luca Masseroni). The bass player Enrico Molteni would join the group for the release of their third EP, Si parte (Leaving). After the release of the first three singles, ignored by the critics, the band recorded their first studio album, Piccolo intervento a vivo (Little live operation), which featured new tracks and live records of some previous songs. This album caught the attention of the record label BMG Ricordi, and the band signed a contract with it for the next LP, titled Mostri e normali (Monsters and normals). The contract was soon broken because TARM opened their own independent record label, La Tempesta. After that they released an online EP, Il principe in bicicletta (Prince on the bike), and all the following albums.
In October 2005 the band toured Uruguay and Argentina with other bands from the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region, included Arbegarde, Kosovni Odpadki and Kraški Ovčarji. In 2008, the group appeared in the movie Come Dio comanda, directed by Gabriele Salvatores, and took part in its soundtrack.
The band members decided to hide their identities from the media and to imagine themselves inside the comics of Davide Toffolo, who was also a popular cartoonist. They would also hide their faces from the public during all concerts, wearing a skull mask and not letting the fans take pictures or videos when they take the mask down. They wear the skull masks, which later became their symbol and fetish, even during their few interviews on television.[2]
The record label La Tempesta releases works by TARM and other artists, related or not, included Il Teatro degli Orrori, Giorgio Canali, Moltheni and Le luci della centrale elettrica.
From September 2008, Davide Toffolo has released three comic books (published by Coconino Press) which contain the completed series of his greatest work: Cinque Allegri Ragazzi Morti (Five happy dead boys). Every book features a CD of TARM: the first CD is a Greates Hits from 2000 to 2007, the second features rare tracks and b-sides, while the third is ther debut album Mondo Naif (1994).
In 2010 the group will release a new album with some different sounds, included "upbeat rhythms and Caribbean hints", as Molteni said.[3]
Tre allegri ragazzi morti often record covers of famous pieces (there's almost one in every released album).