Drilliguria is found in Disme's album

Drilliguria is found in Disme’s album

“This isn’t a record for the charts, it’s for me. It’s a rap album, not to come first, but to express myself.”. “Happy End” marks a further evolution in the artistic path of Disme and offers continuity to the inaugurated trilogy in 2016 with “Vivo Male”the first album released independently on Youtube, followed by “Mala Vita” (2018) and from “Malverde” (2020). His is a rap that outlines “the pain of living”quoting, with all due proportions, the poetics of Eugenio Montale. The project of the rapper from La Spezia reflects a mature and authentic perspective on the daily challenges and temptations of neighborhood life, without neglecting dear topics such as hope and relationshipsbe they friendship or love, which are told in direct language.

Disme puts his rap at the center stories of growth and introspectioninviting listeners not to lose sight of what really matters, despite the ruins that surround us. “The title almost seems like a trap – said the rapper – I have never spoken positively about tomorrow, in any song. In the piece ‘Vattene’ with Massimo Pericolo I really say that the ‘happy ending’ doesn’t exist. Look around you, do you see positivity? People kill each other and betray each other, and often it’s not just individuals who are distant from us who do it, but those we consider ‘friends’. Even love as a feeling seems to me to be in serious crisis. Hope is the last to die, chasing it is never wrong, but that that surrounds us is increasingly crumbling.” Andrew Majuri, this is his real name, born in 1993, is accompanied by the inseparable Ligurian pirate crew, made up of Tedua, Bresh and Izi, all members of the Drilliguria collective and present in three songs of the project. Space also for other guests: Massimo Pericolo and Don Pero. For Disme, music is a sort of therapy, “it’s my psychologist”, he loves to repeat, it is the ideal tool in which to take refuge to escape from the society in which he is inevitably immersed, an element in which his most intimate and profound reflections can truly find a listening ear.

In “Manca l’aria” with Breshsings defiantly, “I’m gonna write a love song about guns and drugs.” “It’s like a meeting between good and evil. In the sentence you quoted lies the desire to transform difficulties into something positiveto communicate that, even in the most difficult situations, it is possible to find a good side – he continued – drugs and weapons kill people, they are terrible, but with a song you can still try to make people fall in love, going beyond that darkness”. It’s not over: “’Sbagli te’ with Tedua is a remake of an old song of mine in which there are pure emotions, immortal for me, that people appreciated. This is why I wanted to rework it. It is those feelings that make the pieces last over time and, why not, also console us”, he underlined.

Disme and Izi alternate and join in a perfectly balanced play of voices in “Latitanza”a song published two years ago and now included in “Lieto fine”, continuing the path of the rapper from La Spezia’s approach to the Latin world which began with an investigation into the dembow genre that he got to know thanks to the multi-ethnicity of some areas of his native Spezia where the Dominican community resides. “La Spezia and Piazza Brin also took care of saving me, in a difficult period of my life in which I thought I was done with music due to a problem with my vocal cords, which was later resolved with a delicate operation – he concluded – from there, connecting with the Dominican community of La Spezia, I created some dembow genre pieces, bringing the multicultural soul of my city to the fore and contaminating, in that period, my rap. It was a success and I will definitely continue on that musical path in the future. ‘Lieto fine’ is a more rap album that closes a cycle of my life and opens another.”