CCCP - Fedeli alla linea


CCCP - Fedeli alla linea is an Italian punk band formed in 1982 in Berlin by vocalist Giovanni Lindo Ferretti and guitarist. The band's style is self-defined by the members themselves as "Musica Melodica Emiliana—Punk Filosovietico". CCCP's works influenced dozen of artists such as Marlene Kuntz, Massimo Volume, and Offlaga Disco Pax.
Their name, CCCP, stems from the Cyrillic script for SSSR, Russian acronym for the Soviet Socialist Republics, although pronounced following the Italian phonetics. CCCP left behind the stereotypes of punk rock, and reached for a genre-defying convergence of militant rock, industrial music, folk, electropop, Middle Eastern music, and even chamber music while delivering through their lyrics a bleak vision of humankind, also introducing elements of expressionist theatre and existentialist philosophy in their live shows.

History

1981–1983: Formation

CCCP was formed in 1981 when Ferretti met Zamboni in a discothèque in Kreuzberg. Once they returned home they founded a new band called MitropaNK. During the following summer Ferretti, Zamboni and bassist Umberto Negri returned to Berlin: it was during that trip that CCCP - Fedeli alla Linea was born. The band members decided to use a drum machine instead of an actual drummer.
The name of the band celebrates the popular sub-culture of Emilia while also praising the Soviet Union, creating a link between Russia and the typical province of Emilia-Romagna.
During this period the band performed several times in West Germany, playing some underground clubs in Berlin such as the Kob or the Spectrumin. Their permanence in Berlin influenced the sound of the band through the local industrial scene. East Berlin's culture and the Islamic community of the West side of the town also influenced Ferretti's lyrics.
The band's first concerts in Italy were met with a negative response from the crowd, leading the band to add two new members to the line-up: Annarella Giudici "Benemerita soubrette", and a performer named. Annarella, Fatur, and for a little time Silvia Bonvicini contributed to characterize their concerts by playing comic-demential sketches during their gigs.

1984–1985: First EPs

In 1984 the band released Ortodossia, their first EP on the independent label Attack Punk Records. In the same year the Ortodossia II EP was released, which included the same three songs already included in their first EP plus an additional fourth track. 1985 saw the release of their third EP, Compagni, Cittadini, Fratelli, Partigiani.
The three EPs were produced and recorded by the band with very little money and few musical instruments in a single room set as a recording studio, near to a city tram line constantly disturbing the recording.

1986: Debut album

Their first studio album, 1964/1985 Affinità-Divergenze fra il Compagno Togliatti e Noi - Del Conseguimento della Maggiore Età, was recorded during 1985 and published by Attack Punk Records in 1986. It reduced the visceral impact of hardcore while focusing on the eerie contrast between a harsh but spare instrumental background and Ferretti's delirious cut-up lyrics and Brecht-ian delivery. An eclectic stylistic range helped craft an oppressive atmosphere of angst and boredom, particularly in the centerpiece, "Emilia Paranoica".
This album is considered by many music critics one of the masterpieces of contemporary Italian music, and a milestone for the whole European punk movement. The album's sales induced Virgin Dischi, the Italian branch of Virgin to sign the band. Some of the band's fans saw this move as betrayal and nicknamed the band "CCCP - Fedeli alla lira" with lira instead of linea.

1987–1988: Signed for Virgin

In 1987 the band recorded and released their first single "Oh! Battagliero" and their second album, Socialismo e Barbarie, which was made with a relatively big budget if compared with the first one. It is a less cohesive work, that ran the gamut from Middle Eastern music to a rock version of the Soviet anthem, from Catholic hymns to feedback workouts.
In 1988 Virgin re-released Socialismo e Barbarie on CD, and their first EPs on the compilation Compagni, cittadini, fratelli, partigiani / Ortodossia II.
In the same year, CCCP released the single "Tomorrow (Voulez vous un rendez vous)", a cover version of a song by the singer and painter Amanda Lear; Amanda Lear sang on both the two tracks of the single.

1989: Third album

The third album, Canzoni, Preghiere, Danze del II Millennio - Sezione Europa, marked their musical evolution into electropop. Keyboard, instead of guitar, became the band's leading instrument. The album was more influenced by Middle Eastern music and was softer than in previous records. It substituted the original sociopolitical emphasis with mystical overtones, and their industrial hardcore with far less revolutionary synthpop.

1989–1990: Litfiba and demise

In 1989 CCCP, Litfiba, and Rats went on tour in the Soviet Union. In Moscow they played in a palace full of soldiers in uniform. The soldiers stood up when the band played, at the end of the concert, the Soviet hymn "A Ja Ljublju SSSR".
During that year guitarist Giorgio Canali, bassist Gianni Maroccolo, keyboardist Francesco Magnelli, and drummer Ringo De Palma joined and transformed the group.
The new group, now composed of eight members, recorded their fourth album, Epica Etica Etnica Pathos, in an abandoned 700' villa. This album signals another musical evolution for the band. CCCP reached their zenith with this album, a Frank Zappa-esque stylistic puzzle, which also stands as a personal musical encyclopedia, with complex suites such as "MACISTE contro TUTTI", their "swan song", and a transition to the new sonorities of the Consorzio Suonatori Indipendenti, the new band born from the ashes of CCCP.
The acronym used for the new band name, C.S.I., evokes the new situation in the Soviet Union, with the Commonwealth of Independent States . With the creation of the CIS, the Soviet Union and the band ceased to exist. CCCP effectively disbanded the 3 October 1990, in the same date of the German reunification, and the members went on to other projects.

Post-CCCP

When the Soviet Union collapsed, Ferretti and Zamboni decided to shuffle the line-up and adopt a less political stance. The renamed Consorzio Suonatori Indipendenti debuted with a set of songs from Ko del Mondo. They rapidly evolved towards a form of chamber rock music with the mostly drum-less Linea Gotica that moved towards alternative rock in the following, and final, Tabula Rasa Elettrificata whose acronym is T.R.E., the number three in Italian. The album, born after a long-desired trip to Mongolia that some members of the band took interrupting the Linea Gotica tour is "probably the only rock album in the history of CCCP-CSI" according to the leader Ferretti, and became a unique case in the Italian recording industry, being able to climb the charts in a few weeks topping commercial giants like Be Here Now by Oasis.
When C.S.I. disbanded in 1999, Ferretti debuted solo with, then formed Per Grazia Ricevuta and released PGR that steered towards world music.

Members

Members timeline


TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy
ImageSize = width:540 height:300
PlotArea = width:450 height:250 bottom:20 left:20
Colors =
id:canvas value:rgb
id:grid1 value:rgb
id:grid2 value:gray
id:bars value:rgb
id:bg value:white
id:2color value:rgb
BackgroundColors = canvas:bg
Period = from:1981 till:1990
ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:1 start:1981 gridcolor:grid1
BarData=
barset:Bandmembers
PlotData=
  1. set defaults
width:20 fontsize:m textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift: color:bars barset:Bandmembers
from:1982 till:1990 text:"Giovanni Lindo Ferretti"
color:2color
from:1982 till:1990 text:"Massimo Zamboni"
from:1982 till:1985 text:"Umberto Negri"
color:2color
from:1984 till:1990 text:"Danilo Fatur"
from:1984 till:1990 text:"Annarella Giudici"
color:2color
from:1986 till:1989 text:"Carlo Chiapparini"
from:1986 till:1989 text:"Ignazio Orlando"
color:2color
from:1989 till:1990 text:"Gianni Maroccolo"
from:1989 till:1990 text:"Francesco Magnelli"
color:2color
from:1989 till:1990 text:"Ringo De Palma"
from:1989 till:1990 text:"Giorgio Canali"

Discography

Studio albums

1964/1985 Affinità-Divergenze fra il Compagno Togliatti e Noi - Del Conseguimento della Maggiore Età, Attack Punk Records, red vinyl 1986, re-released in 1988 by VirginSocialismo e Barbarie, Virgin Records 1987, re-released in 1988 on CD with two extra tracks.Canzoni, Preghiere, Danze del II Millennio - Sezione Europa, Virgin, 1989Epica Etica Etnica Pathos, Virgin, 1990

Live albums

Live in Punkow, Virgin, 1996

Compilation albums

Compagni, cittadini, fratelli, partigiani / Ortodossia II, Virgin, 1988Ecco i miei gioielli, Virgin, 1992Enjoy CCCP, Virgin, 1994Essential (CCCP), EMI, 2012

Singles

Oh! Battagliero, Virgin, 1987Tomorrow (Voulez vous un rendez vous), Virgin, 7" and 12" vinyl, 1988

EPs

Ortodossia, Attack Punk Records, red vinyl, 1984Ortodossia II, Attack Punk Records, red vinyl, re-released in 1985 by Virgin in black vinylCompagni, Cittadini, Fratelli, Partigiani, Attack Punk Records, picture disc, re-released in 1985 by Virgin in black vinylRagazza emancipata, Stampa Alternativa, 1990

VHS

Tempi moderni, 1989

Theatre

Allerghia, 1987–1988