Ghali, protagonist of the new issue of GQ Italia

The cover star of the new issue of GQ Italy, on newsstands from May 6, is Ghali. The artist, who has helped to change Italian music in recent years, returns with a new album, the most important for her career, and decides to tell the magazine exclusively.

“I don’t have great singing skills, mine was a great desire to change my life, to fix some things” says the singer. “I come from a certain situation, I lived a traumatic childhood, which has always pushed me to want to get out of it, as soon as possible. I grew up in the midst of difficult situations, doing credit recovery with my parents in via Padova when NoLo still meant nothing. All that life there took away a father from me, something I’m feeling so much about now. The main cause of these traumas of mine was the road and I don’t want to get into that loop, I don’t want to use my father’s excuse to stay in that trap and have my children stay there. I am the only one of all the children of my parents’ friends who has not been ripped off by social workers to be placed in another family. I have always brought parcels to my father in San Vittore, for him and for all his cellmates, for the whole range. “

Fragments of childhood, studded with difficulties, but also a great desire to build a different, better future. “I’ve never been afraid of not being accepted in the park, I had the trauma of not being accepted by families. This stuff fucked my brain. So at some point I decided that I was going to make music for families, I drew a plan in my head. I wanted my record to be listened to in the car by a family of five, with everyone appreciating it from start to finish. I wanted mothers at my concerts. And for me there is nothing more hip hop than this, it is the real redemption “says the artist, portrayed for the cover of GQ Italia by the American director and photographer Nabil Elderkin.

“I’m going to say something strong: I don’t take sides in religion, which is an important thing, let alone if I have to do it in music. I am a Muslim, but up to the age of four I ate ham, I went to the nuns asylum. Rap for me is the basis, it’s how I think the lyrics, the rhymes, but rap has me also taught to discover, to be curious, to look at all music.

The complete interview will be available in the issue of GQ Italia on newsstands from 6 May.

Source: Vanity Fair

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