Follia D’amore (Madness of Love) sweeps you into a jazzy whirlwind where head-spinning piano riffs meet a heart that can’t decide whether to say yes or never. Raphael Gualazzi paints love as an orbit of sweet confusion: he no longer knows who his partner is, and sometimes not even who he is, yet the very uncertainty feels hypnotic. Ordinary snapshots – a lingering coffee, a passing day-by-day, night-by-night rhythm – suddenly glow with surreal intensity, as if romance has tilted the whole world away from its usual “poesia.”
Amid the playful scat singing and vintage swing, the message turns hopeful. By surrendering to this shared “follia,” both lovers glimpse brighter versions of themselves: he becomes openly fragile, she shines “quasi invincibile,” and together they sparkle beyond every false magic. Gualazzi isn’t asking to change or possess; he simply wants to savor every single moment and let their crazy love light the horizon until it blazes splenderai, splenderai. The song reminds us that accepting love’s beautiful madness can reveal our truest, most radiant selves.