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As I was setting up the equipment to record the livestream, many residents from the "sails" supported and helped me, even physically carrying the equipment for over ten floors! I lived in Scampia until elementary school, then my parents moved to the north to look for a job, and we spent four months in the south during the holidays. There were a few parties organised by the boys of the oratories centres where young people who knew each other from the church then met in the afternoon but they were certainly not raves!
I have never understood what is meant by "Music Culture". I often remember hearing stories about thefts, accidents, even deaths, and I had normalized them. Where you surprised at how successful it was?
Even during the lockdown, people in the different buildings supported each other as much as they could, with food, medicine, and other essentials. People help each other out and there is a real sense of community. Read this next: Gotta get up: Meet the dancers of Ibiza. Is it an accurate reflection of Scampia? Is it where you learned to DJ? Was it someone from your neighbourhood that helped teach you to become a DJ?
No, I moved to the north of Italy with my family when I went to elementary school. There was nothing else!
I have always loved music for as long as I can remember, and I grew up listening to thousands of records that my father collected, of all kinds. I was very surprised and very happy!
But I never felt that my life was danger, ever. Anyone who knows my music knows that I love contamination. I love mixing sounds with melodies far removed from the underground and for this I have sometimes been criticised. During the time when I was a dancer at a club in Riccione a small town coastal town in the North of Italy a club owner from Verona learned that I was starting to DJ.
He offered me the same money I was getting paid as a dancer to play in his club. The neighbourhood where I was born is "famous" in a negative way, precisely because it is connected to the Gomorrah series. Part of the reason for me doing the stream there was because I wanted to show the world that it is no longer that reality. I still feel it and we are still friends to this day! How did the stream come about?
I then returned to live in Naples 15 years ago when I was in my mid twenties. Those colours and scents gave me the desire and the energy to start my new album.
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I think the success of the live stream is linked to two factors: the place and the music. You recently did an amazing stream with Mixmag from the Le Vele in Scampia, the housing development that features in the crime dramas Gomorrah — where you also grew up. The stream has now been watched by over 5 million people in just a few weeks and still growing. Have you watched the Gomorrah TV series and movies? I actually learned to DJ in the club, in front of the public, making mistakes and making a fool of myself.
I found a lot of inspiration in the vacation I took in the Maldives in January. Maybe this is a good thing though, as it serves to keep my feet on the ground and to enjoy every step. That is my culture! How did you find peace?
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What is your advice for others who have similar problems? Now none of those stories exist any more. With a brand new album 'She Sleeps' just released and after a huge Mixmag stream from Le Vele, Scampia , the iconic Naples housing development that features in the TV and film crime dramas Gomorrah and where she also grew up , Italian techno star Deborah De Luca talks to Mixmag about her music, inspiration, COVID and what life was like on that iconic estate.
There were so many people who wanted to help which was amazing. They are people with a huge heart!