Susanna Parigi | |
Birth Date: | 13 May 1961 |
Birth Place: | Florence, Italy |
Death Place: | Milan, Italy |
Genre: | Pop |
Years Active: | 1987–2023 |
Occupation: | Singer, songwriter, pianist, author |
Susanna Parigi (13 May 1961 – 18 December 2023) was an Italian singer, songwriter, pianist and author.[1]
After earning her diploma in piano at the Cherubini Conservatory in Florence, Parigi studied modern singing in Rome, opera in Bologna, and jazz in Milan.[2]
Parigi's early songs were discovered by Vincenzo Micocci, who signed her to the IT label. Her debut single, "Un anello di fumo" (A smoke ring) earned her first prize as a singer on La fabbrica dei sogni (The dream factory) TV show on RAI 3.
Parigi toured as a pianist with Greg Brown and Riccardo Cocciante, as a vocalist and accordion player with Claudio Baglioni, and with Raf for his album Cannibali.[3]
Her first album, Susanna Parigi, was released in 1995. With this album, the author began a personal path devoting herself to songwriting. Since her second album, Scomposta (1999), Parigi collaborated with Kaballà, a songwriter who shared her views.
Her third album, In differenze, includes a collaboration with Pat Metheny. Tony Levin, the Sofia Symphonic Orchestra, well-known Italian musicians, and philosopher Umberto Galimberti also appear on or contributed to the album, whose cover was photographed by Sebastião Salgado. It was performed in live shows in Milan, Florence, Bologna, and at the Colosseo. In December 2006 the show was released on DVD with the cooperation of Doctors Without Borders.
In 2000 her song "Tre passi indietro" received first prize and a special award for Best Composition" at the International Festival of Songwriting in Switzerland.[4]
In 2003, Parigi was a finalist at the Festival della Canzone d'Autore in Recanati.
In 2009, she released L'insulto delle parole (The insult of words). A videoclip contains interviews with Italian writers and artists; the main theme is the way language is often mishandled by mass media: new words for old facts, old words for new facts are, according to the author, an insult to people.
Parigi also taught at the Bonporti Conservatory of Trento.
She died at 62 in December 17, 2023 from a long illness.[5]