An Italian singer-songwriter who found his audience through Sanremo and songs that speak plainly about life and society.
For a good sense of Moro's range, listen to 'Eppure Mi Hai Cambiato La Vita' alongside 'Non è una canzone.' One's about personal change, the other about public failure, but both sound like him.
Moro's music matters because it connects personal struggle with broader social observation in a way that feels grounded, not preachy. Songs like 'Eppure Mi Hai Cambiato La Vita' show his knack for writing about relationships without grand gestures, while 'Non è una canzone' directly addressed the L'Aquila earthquake response. He's been open about living with bipolar disorder since 2017, which adds another layer of honesty to his writing.
He started putting out music in the mid-90s with a self-titled debut that didn't make much noise initially. Things shifted after performing 'Pensa' at the 2004 Sanremo Music Festival, which won him the Mia Martini Critics' Award and brought his music to a wider Italian audience. Since then he's released albums like 'Domani,' 'Pace,' and kept working with a loose group of musicians including bassist Davide Di Leo.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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