EroCaddeo, the first album "write me when you arrive (period)" is the story of an entire generation
The 27-year-old from Sinnai's album, "No Potho Reposare," is out now on all platforms (Atlantic Records and Cvlto Music Group).Per restare aggiornato entra nel nostro canale Whatsapp
There are records that speak of love and others that make you feel it, breathe it, live it, like a slowly rising fever. In "Scrivimi quando arriva (punto)," eroCaddeo's debut album, released yesterday on all music platforms by Atlantic Records and Cvlto Music Group, each song opens the door to a different room: there's the vertigo of beginnings, the fragile quiet of habit, the wound of distance, and that light that remains even when everything seems to end.
The 27-year-old from Sinnai, second place at X Factor 2025 and former winner of the Radiolina Contest, with his first album takes us by the hand on a twelve-song journey that unfolds the intimate story not only of a boy but of a generation still searching for itself.
It begins with a truly impressive intro: a melody featuring piano, violin, cello, and double bass, echoing the notes of "Luglio." It's followed by a series of love poems: the stubborn melancholy of "Parlo ancora di te," the permanent state of uncertainty of "Metti che domani te ne vai," and in "Cani" the intimacy of small, minuscule gestures that are more important than any formal promise.
Track number five is finally "Luglio," a hymn to Cagliari and to the love that endures in small and large things, like a sunset on Poetto beach, sung as it was at the Fiera stadium last December 23rd, and here also in an acoustic version. And then there's the frantic need to earn another "Five Minutes" of love and the awareness of how much it can hurt with "Gravità zero." And then there's the unreleased track spoiled in Cagliari, "Odio il caffè," a revulsion triggered by a special broken cup and the cold you can feel when you wake up alone.
Embellished with an alternative ending, "Punto," the single in Spotify's Top 50 Italy for over a month and the most streamed single from X Factor, closes with a moving rendition of "No potho reposare," which Sini wrote in six-syllable lines for his "Diosa" and which Giuseppe Rachel set to music. A common thread uniting lovers of yesterday and tomorrow, and a tribute to his homeland.
