Renato D'Amico is one of the totally new faces of Sanremo Giovani 2025there are no active talent participations or other things that could indicate a previous and particular knowledge of this artist on the part of the public.
He presents himself in the race with Little kissa song with strong funky, fusion influences that makes you want to dance and which he told our microphones in great detail.
How do you approach the race in the right way?
“I'm living it well with a song that I feel is truly mine, this thing relaxes me and I don't feel forced. I'm very happy”
An important past with important collaborations and a future yet to be written. Little kiss what kind of song is it?
“I have a great passion with living the studio and the creative part. In recent years I have started working on the whole project and two years ago I wrote Bacio Piccolino. When you write songs for others it is difficult to find your own path again but this song brought me back on the right path.
I wrote it for a girl who was important to me, to find my artistic and personal balance and it is a contrast that I often try to repeat in my songs. I try to find an emotional text and put it on a light base, then trying to give it a lighter frame.”
FROM INSIGHTS TO THE RACE
The creative inspiration is that of Nu Geneaknown and loved in Italy and abroad. In the future, do you think you will look abroad like they did?
“It's definitely one of my goals, I plan to spend a year abroad in France. Nu Genea is a group that I love very much, together with the Neapolitan and Napoli Centrale schools, as well as Battisti or Enzo Carella.
The difficulty at this moment was finding a key in this genre. Unlike the projects I mentioned, the idea was to go and work on the song form and go back to working with the musicians, taking this song on the road with a band would be cool.”
What do you expect from the race?
“I'm curious to meet the kids with whom we will share this experience and I'm curious to approach the world of television. Seeing the response to this type of music on TV intrigues me a lot, leaving aside the competition and results, risking bringing a genre that I haven't often seen on TV.
I look at this thing with curiosity and a desire to learn, more than the race and the competition”
