Vivere ("To Live") is a vibrant dialogue where Andrea Bocelli and Gerardina Trovato look into the mirror and confess their doubts, fears, and stubborn hopes. They admit to “ricopiando yesterday”—copying yesterday—while stumbling through life’s mess, loving love but not always loving people, and wondering why no one ever taught us how to live. The song travels from personal insecurity to social awareness, pausing at the image of a man sleeping in a cardboard box, then soaring back to the power of a single voice that can still create beauty.
Despite the melancholy, the chorus explodes with determination: life is worth singing even when it feels unrequested, half-lived, or borrowed from the past. "Vivere" invites us to chase the grande amore, live as if we might never die, and finally shout “Ho voglia di vivere!”—“I want to live!” It is both a gentle reminder and a joyful challenge to craft our own melody before the song is over.
Andrea Bocelli, born on September 22, 1958, in Lajatico, Italy, is one of the world’s most celebrated tenors. Blind since the age of 12, Bocelli’s powerful voice and emotive performances have captivated audiences worldwide, blending opera with pop in a unique classical crossover style.
He rose to fame after winning the newcomers' section of the 1994 Sanremo Music Festival with "Il mare calmo della sera". Since then, Bocelli has recorded 15 studio albums and sold over 90 million records globally, with hits like "Con te partirò" becoming timeless classics. Honored with awards including a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, his remarkable journey combines passion, resilience, and extraordinary musical talent.