- Digital
Domenico Di Vito
Immagini e colori
Four Flies
- Cat No: SPE29
- Release: 2021-12-24
Track List
-
1. Domenico Di Vito - Images and Colours
03:24 -
2. Domenico Di Vito - Contemplation
03:17 -
3. Domenico Di Vito - Cheerfully
02:09 -
4. Domenico Di Vito - The Long Goodbye
02:32 -
5. Domenico Di Vito - Happy Ending Story
02:47 -
6. Domenico Di Vito - Towards the Future
02:37 -
7. Domenico Di Vito - Waste Land
03:40 -
8. Domenico Di Vito - Trouble Free
02:11 -
9. Domenico Di Vito - The Wretched Emigrant
02:12 -
10. Domenico Di Vito - A New Day
02:17 -
11. Domenico Di Vito - Dreaming of You
02:22 -
12. Domenico Di Vito - Baroque Jazz
00:46
24bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
Four Flies presents the first digital remastered version of Immagini e Colori by Giacomo Dell'Orso, one of two separate albums released with the same title in 1974. Here writing under the moniker Domenico Di Vito (elsewhere he used the pseudonym Oscar Lindok), Dell'Orso is among the most prolific library composers from the 70s. This version comes with two previously unreleased bonus tracks from his archives.
The 12 instrumental pieces in the album evoke very different atmospheres and feelings, from light-hearted romanticism to heroism and tragedy, as it was often the case with the library music of the time, which was composed and recorded with a view to providing a flexible range of mood setters for film, TV or radio productions that did not yet exist. Playing on the album are Gianni Lecis (harpsichord), Alberto Corvini (trumpet), Nino Rapicavoli (flute), and Dell'Orso himself (keyboards and synths).
The 12 instrumental pieces in the album evoke very different atmospheres and feelings, from light-hearted romanticism to heroism and tragedy, as it was often the case with the library music of the time, which was composed and recorded with a view to providing a flexible range of mood setters for film, TV or radio productions that did not yet exist. Playing on the album are Gianni Lecis (harpsichord), Alberto Corvini (trumpet), Nino Rapicavoli (flute), and Dell'Orso himself (keyboards and synths).