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12"
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ITALIC 075EP
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"From Rimini to Chicago, it is no secret that you get the best pizza in Naples. Though Luciano Pizzella, born in 1974 and living in Naples, is not a pizza maker but a biologist with a focus on insect research. His culinary Italo disco tunes are nevertheless extremely tasty. And apart from being a biologist, he is also into both early and contemporary house and disco music productions. Following his debut EP Public House (on Italic) which could be spotted in famous people's record cases, for example, the ones of Sven Väth or John Digweed, Luciano Pizzella now presents his new EP on Italic with the wonderful title Electronic Clouds. The title track is enormously deep and has a running time of almost 12 minutes. It can be described as an intercontinental sound trip going from Rimini to Chicago and back again. A synth hookline and an old-school house bassline meet up with loads of many exciting percussion elements. 'Your Music Moved My Teeth' is Pizzella's other coup. The modulated, grinding bass sound is just perfect for all you heavyweight DJs out there: this one is a real primetime pusher. And 'Muscle Contraction' completes this EP: in a minimal and most funky way, this track will rock the sweating bodies at the beach of Rimini right into dawn. Bella Italia."
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12"
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ITALIC 069EP
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"Luciano Pizzella, born 1974, a Neapolitan biologist from Italy with focus on insect research. Apart from this, he is also doing research in both early and contemporary house and disco productions. Though all of Luciano Pizzella's tracks are deeply routed in the style and attitudes of legendary Italian disco producers and DJs such as Daniele Baldelli and Beppe Loda, he transfers these early sounds into new and more contemporary disco and club worlds represented by producers such as Isolee or Daniel Wang. The title track 'Public House' is a blend of disco - made in Italy - Detroit techno and Chicago house. 'Melarmonico' is a celestially elegant piece of disco music - as if it was 'Chic' in 2007. 'How to Contact Your Liver' is this EP's final track: its soft space beat together with the vocals that sound as if taken from another solar system make a perfect match with the wonderful, deep strings -- actually the spaceship's nuclear drive on its way into a new disco galaxy. Well, good music has always come 'from outerspace' - or let's say Italy."
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