| Sounds Like | This five-piece from Parma was formed in 1971 from the ashes of Gli Immortali,
a group that included singer Bernardo Lanzetti, just returned back to Italy
after a long living in the USA, guitarist Gino Campanini and drummer Piero
Canavera. These musicians were joined by keyboardist Maurizio Mori and bass
player Franz Dondi (who has played with I Moschettieri, that were among the
young bands supporting The Rolling Stones during their italian tour, but just
released a single in 1967, Quando il tempo dell'amore).
In one of the last concerts with the old name, the five musicians were
spotted by Premiata Forneria Marconi, that introduced them to their manager
Franco Mamone. With the new name Acqua Fragile and the professional management
of Mamone, the group was able to play with important foreign names such as Soft
Machine, Alexis Korner & Snape, Tempest, Curved Air,
Audience, Uriah Heep, and
above all, Gentle Giant.
Their first album was released in 1973 on the independent Numero Uno label, one
of the very few Italian prog albums entirely sung in English. A good album with
nice west-coast multivocal influences mixed with an english prog sound,
especially inspired by the likes of Genesis and Gentle Giant. The LP included
seven long tracks, with good instrumental parts and the nice original harsh
voice of Lanzetti, not far from Family's singer Roger Chapman distinctive
tremolo technique. The choice of singing in english didn't probably help the
group in achieving a good popularity in Italy, and the album wasn't released
abroad as it was probably planned. Oddly the english lyrics weren't included in
the album cover, that only contained the italian translation.
Their second album Mass Media Stars was from 1974 and also gained an US
release, thanks to the English lyrics. Not dissimilar from their first but with
a slightly better production, this contained six long cuts. At the end of 1974
keyboardist Joe Vescovi replaced Maurizio Mori after The Trip's split. He stayed
in for some months and his presence is documented in the bootleg-quality Live in Emilia CD. But the strongest hit to the group's stability came when Bernardo
Lanzetti joined PFM, replaced for a while by Roby Facini, previously with I Top
4 and Dik Dik. Acqua Fragile split in 1975.
(source: italianprog.com) |