Alice - Azimut -1982 Pop- -flac 16-44- -

Azimut is the fifth studio album by Italian singer-songwriter Alice (born Carla Bissi), released in 1982 through EMI Music. It is a quintessential piece of early 80s Italian pop, blending synth-heavy arrangements with experimental rock and New Wave influences. Album Overview

Have you listened to this era of Alice? Do you prefer the Battiato-produced electronic period or her earlier work? Let me know in the comments below.

Produced by the legendary Franco Battiato and Giusto Pio, the record moves away from traditional Italian cantautore tropes and dives headfirst into minimalism. The synths are cold, the basslines are hypnotic, and Alice’s voice—crystalline, fragile, yet incredibly disciplined—floats above the mix like a ghost. Alice - Azimut -1982 Pop- -Flac 16-44-

4. Physical CD (then rip to FLAC)

Purchase a used copy of the 1982 CD reissue (EMI 7243 8 57340 2 4) or the 2017 Japanese reprint (UICY-78731). Rip using Exact Audio Copy (EAC) or XLD to create your own verified FLAC 16-44 files.

Technical Deep Dive: Why FLAC 16-Bit / 44.1kHz?

The keyword suffix “-Flac 16-44-” is not random. It refers to the Red Book CD standard (16-bit resolution, 44.1 kHz sampling rate). Here is why that matters for Azimut: Azimut is the fifth studio album by Italian

High-energy duet with Franco Battiato; features multi-language nonsensical lyrics. Laura degli specchi

"Chan-son Egocentrique": A bilingual (French/Italian/German/English) duet with Franco Battiato. Do you prefer the Battiato-produced electronic period or

The album's distinct sound is the result of a powerhouse collaboration. While Alice (born Carla Bissi) asserted her creative voice by writing or co-writing nearly every track, the production was helmed by Angelo Carrara. Battiato, often using the pseudonym "Albert Kui," contributed significantly to the songwriting and arrangements alongside Giusto Pio Musically, is a blend of: Art Pop/Prog Pop: