Alice - Azimut -1982 Pop- -flac 16-44- |work| Jun 2026
, notable for its sophisticated production and high-fidelity sound, which is particularly evident in a 16-bit/44.1kHz FLAC 💿 Album Overview Alice (born Carla Bissi) Italo Pop, New Wave, Art Pop Angelo Carrara Key Collaborators: Franco Battiato and Giusto Pio 🎵 Essential Tracks
Listening to Azimut in this format is an act of time travel. You are hearing the album exactly as the 1982 engineers intended it to be heard in the recording studio. The format matters here because Azimut is an album defined by its production. The separation of the synthesizers, the reverb on Alice’s voice, the punch of the bass—it requires the lossless clarity of FLAC to truly appreciate. An MP3 would smooth over the sharp edges that make the album distinct; the FLAC preserves Alice - Azimut -1982 Pop- -Flac 16-44-
While the original release was on LP and Cassette in 1982, digital versions (including the CD reissues from 1987 and 1998) are the likely sources for modern FLAC files. You can explore various pressings and versions on Discogs . , notable for its sophisticated production and high-fidelity
(Note: Some reissues include bonus tracks.) The separation of the synthesizers, the reverb on
: A major hit co-written by Battiato and Pio, showcasing Alice’s ability to command a personality-driven pop song. "Chan-son Egocentrique" : A landmark duet with Franco Battiato that became a synth-pop staple. "Laura degli specchi" : Written by Eugenio Finardi
After her unexpected victory at the 1981 Sanremo Music Festival with the song "Per Elisa" (from the album Alice ), Alice could have easily pursued a conventional pop career. Instead, she doubled down on avant-garde experimentation. Azimut (the Italian word for , the spherical angle used in astronomy and navigation) is a conceptual album about direction, disorientation, and finding one’s place in the universe.