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    Andrea Laszlo De Simone, a self-taught artist from Turin, creates what critics often call or "cosmic pop". Playing nearly all the instruments himself in his home studio, he weaves a sound that feels both intimate and cinematic.

    If you’re looking for a musical experience that feels like a "journey from darkness to light," you need to dive into masterwork, Immensità . Released as a concept EP and multimedia suite, it isn't just a collection of songs—it’s a swirling, 25-minute orchestral meditation on the circularity of life, death, and rebirth. The Sound of "Cosmic Pop"

    : Concludes with "Conchiglie" (Seashells), a heartbreaking acceptance of loss that crashes into an expansive orchestral outro. Why It Resonates

    Immensità was written while the artist was expecting his second child, heavily influenced by Blaise Pascal’s theory of "dual infinities"—the idea that humans exist between the infinitely large and the infinitely small. It captures a sense of —an intense longing—that feels universally understood even if you don't speak a word of Italian.

    : You can hear the DNA of 1970s Italian legends like Lucio Battisti , blended with the grand orchestrations of 15th-century "Grotesque" art and modern electronic touches reminiscent of Radiohead .