| All three of them have had  classical voice training, but to look at them you would guess the Appassionante  singers were more at home in pulsating city night life than in an opera house:  Stefania, Mara and Giorgia are young, spontaneous and drop-dead gorgeous. Just  like their music that syncs with both worlds: traditional and pop. “Opera and  classical music are utterly modern,” Mara says, and a fine smile plays around  the corners of her mouth. “You simply have to understand and interpret it as  such.” And that’s exactly what the three singers do: very convincingly and in  every which way.Appassionante, to stretch a point,  means something like “thrills and chills” and the name is inseparably linked to  the origin of the trio: “Our Mediterranean temperament speaks through our  music,” says Giorgia, “everything that moves us as humans.” And that’s the way  joy, melancholy and above all passion sound in the interplay of their voices –  seductive to the ear, but also to the eye. “Who says we have to appear onstage  high-necked and traditional,” Stefania explains with a charming twinkle, “we  like it. Eroticism and music are two very passionate forms of communication,  and together they generate a very strong language.” Stefania, Mara and Giorgia  aren’t afraid to show this sensuality, in their music and in their appearance. The  Appassionante girls are modern, vivacious and sexy. And the way they are  divests classical sound of all its cobwebs and turns it into prospective hits. With  no ifs, ands or buts.
   Roman voices and international success   Life’s focal point for  Appassionante is Rome. Here the girls spend their free time, draw ideas and  energy from the life of the eternal city; here was also the trio’s origin. Long  before Appassionante ever existed, the singers had met in Rome and come to  prize each other. Yet as much as the tone and the  character of the music is infused with an Italian approach to life, the first  step the trio took towards the public was in Germany: their debut album “Appassionante”  was recorded 2005 in Berlin. “Germany has become a second home to us; here is  where our adventure started out,” Stefania says of their beginnings, “and we  have become very fond of the beauty as well as the character of this country. There’s  a lot of respect here for art and also for foreign lands.
 ” Success has, in the meantime,  carried Appassionante far, from their first meeting in Rome, via the recording  studio in Germany and out into the wide, wide world, all the way to South  Africa and Singapore.
   Salve – the second  album   Via the Roman greeting of “Salve”, Appassionante is getting in touch  with their public in all these countries. With an accompaniment by the Czech  National Symphony Orchestra of Prague, a powerful and yet delicately beguiling  coexistence of pop and classical elements wins the day. String instruments go  hand in hand with danceable beats; new titles composed for “Salve” encounter  classical Italian scores and worldwide triumphs from the newer history of music  – and, à la Appassionante, are given a whole new face.  “Sweet Dreams, for instance,  we’ve newly interpreted symphonically with an orchestra and an acoustic  arrangement; the hot Latino blood of the Spanish guitar works in well – and now  it’s a mix of classic, flamenco and dance,” Mara laughs. “But pieces like Sweet  Dreams or The Show Must Go On are an enormous challenge for us. We  approach artistic icons like Freddie Mercury only with the greatest awe and  also embarrassment.”
 The diversity of the album is not  only manifest in the choice of musical pieces and the different styles and  instrumentations, also the language ranges from Italian, English and Spanish by  way of Latin all the way to Neapolitan, which is much more than just an Italian  dialect.
 Despite the variety in “Salve”,  tradition and experimental gusto always remain in balance. For the very  powerful music, also in its quiet moments, bows before Stefania, Mara and  Giorgia, who in their heady voices playfully and emotionally unite the  classical with the modern.
 Salve was released July 25th 2008  (Distribution: Edel).
 Since March 2010  Appassionante is the official worldwide Testimonials of the important German Airline  Company AirBerlin which the three sopranos, to celebrate the  new collaboration, have already composed and dedicated an original song to,  called "Wings". Thanks to this great cooperation and concerts managed  from the aircraft company, the group has much more visibility in all the world,  from America to the Emirates, from the Maldives to Israel. On the next spring a  "Best of" the first two albums, called "Passion", will be released.Appassionante is  also working on their third album "Nell'Aria"  which will come out in autumn 2011.
   Stefania Francabandiera comes from the  southern port town of Barletta in Apulia, at the heel of the Italian boot –  maybe that’s where she derives her close emotional relationship to the sea. In any case the sea corresponds to her  character with its electric tension between gentle swells and underlying power:  Stefania spends her free time with literature, her penchant for sensual clothes  – and kickboxing at a fitness studio. For this certified early riser,  this is an ideal combination for the care of mind and body. Stefania studied classical voice in Bari,  but also worked with internationally known pop greats like Zucchero or Eros  Ramazzotti before she launched her own project with Appassionante.   Mara Tanchis’ motto is:  “Today is the first day of your life!” And true to this motto she plans her daily routine: meeting friends,  dancing and turning the night to day in Rome’s heat – and, contrary to  Stefania, as far as possible not getting up before noon. But there are also  quieter moments; from time to time Mara retires to the seclusion of a small  mountain village and lets it all hang out. Mara doesn’t come from the Italian  mainland; she was born on Sardinia. Musically she at first chose the classical  mode and studied at the conservatory in Bologna; her voice even took her to the  Vatican where she sang for the Pope. With Appassionate she can link her  training to her musical predilections: Mara’s idols are Freddie Mercury and  Whitney Houston.  Giorgia Villa has many very  different enthusiasms. One of them  is for the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda who was awarded the 1971 Nobel prize for  literature, another one for painting, and a third is one she nurtures in common  with many women: she collects shoes. Giorgia is Roman by birth and grew up  south of Rome in Frosinone, the capital of the province of the same name. She  was drawn very early to London to study classical and modern music. And a  little also to conquer the world from there: Giorgia worked with musical  artists like Gary Barlow, Robbie Williams and others. But the film “La dolce  vita”, Federico Fellini’s masterpiece, sparked in her a fascination with her  native city. Once she arrived, the road to Appassionante was not far: since  2007 she has been Emma Ahren’s successor. |