Fabrizio Moro
Artist profile

Fabrizio Moro

Fabrizio Moro lyrics, artist story, and photo gallery on LyroVerse.

album71 lyric pages photo_library1 photo groups12 listeners here now Editor's note live
person Curated by Ethan Walker LyroVerse team
Start here

The pages that open this catalog up fastest

These picks surface the stronger lyric pages first instead of dropping you into one endless list.

Editor's note

Fabrizio Moro's Roman voice, social conscience, and quiet persistence

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.

edit_note Ethan Walker · LyroVerse team · Apr 19
verified

LyroVerse editor's notes are short interpretation guides, not final verdicts. If something needs a correction, visit About or Contact.

Artist at a glance

The fast read

71 lyric pages live 1 photo available Editor's note live Video on page
Photos

Visual archive

Real photos only. No placeholder gallery promo.

Open gallery
Fabrizio Moro
Background notes

Archive material and source history

Fabrizio Moro was born in Rome in 1975. He started putting out music in the mid-90s, with his self-titled debut album arriving in 1996. It didn't make much noise at first, but he kept writing and playing around Rome's local scene.

Things shifted in 2004 when he performed at the Sanremo Music Festival with the song 'Pensa,' which won him the Mia Martini Critics' Award. That recognition helped bring his music to a wider Italian audience. He's released albums like 'Domani,' 'Pensa,' and 'Pace' since then, and songs like 'Portami Via' and 'Eppure Mi Hai Cambiato La Vita' have become familiar to listeners.

Moro has been open about dealing with bipolar disorder, mentioning it publicly in 2017. His writing sometimes touches on social matters, as with 'Non è una canzone,' which addressed the L'Aquila earthquake response. He typically works with a loose group of musicians, including bassist Davide Di Leo and guitarist Danilo Tasco.

Quick answers

What this artist page can answer fast

Where should I start with Fabrizio Moro on LyroVerse?

The Start here section opens with Sono Anni Che Ti Aspetto, Quasi, and 9096 Ro.La so you can move through the artist's stronger lyric pages first.

How many lyric pages are live for Fabrizio Moro?

LyroVerse currently has 71 visible lyric pages for Fabrizio Moro.

Does Fabrizio Moro have photos on LyroVerse?

Yes. There are 1 photo available, and the preview gallery on this page links to the full photos section.

Does LyroVerse have an editor's note for Fabrizio Moro?

Yes. The editor's note on this page is a short LyroVerse team guide, not a final verdict on the artist.

Artist Community

Not just lyrics. The conversation around them.

Follow the artist, compare interpretations across songs, and leave corrections that help the catalog stay sharp.

Open artist hub
0 followers Artist hub stays noindex until the conversations are proven strong
Listener comments

What people are saying

0 comments
Share a short memory or first impression

Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.

Sign in to post the first listener note. Reporting stays open to everyone.

No listener comments on Fabrizio Moro yet.