Gigi D'Agostino

Artist

Popular As Gigi Dag · Dottor Dag · Il Folklorista · Lento Violento Man · Orchestra Maldestra · Scialadance · Uomo Suono · Zarro Dag

Birthday December 17, 1967

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Turin, Italy

Age 56 years old

Nationality Italy

#7034 Most Popular

1967

Luigino Celestino di Agostino (born 17 December 1967), known professionally as Gigi D'Agostino, is an Italian DJ, remixer, singer and record producer.

Born in Turin, Italy on 17 December 1967, to parents from Salerno, Campania, D'Agostino spent his childhood between Turin and Brescia, where the Media Records studios are located.

As a child, D'Agostino wanted to be someone in the world of disco music.

Starting out working as a stonemason and a fitter, he began his musical career as a DJ by organizing parties in clubs.

His debut was in a club near Turin called "Woodstock".

1986

In 1986, he started his career as a DJ spinning Italo disco.

1987

He worked also in a small club called Palladio in Cascinette d'Ivrea (30 km north from Turin) from 1987 until around 1992 and in a club called Le Palace in the Valentino Castle Garden in Turin.

1993

He was resident DJ of an Italian disco named Ultimo Impero from 1993 to 1998.

D'Agostino's first release was Noise Makers Theme, a double-A-sided record with a track by Daniele Gas on the other side, which launched the Noise Maker label, under the direction of Italo house producer Gianfranco Bortolotti.

D'Agostino would continue working with Gas, as well as Mauro Picotto's production team in the following years.

As a DJ, D'Agostino is known as one of the "pioneers of Mediterranean Progressive Dance", consisting of minimalistic sounds and Latin and Mediterranean melodies.

As a record producer, D'Agostino's uses the pseudonym "Gigi Dag"; he transforms a piece, originally destined for the discos, into a success for the mainstream public.

After successes like the track "Sweetly", he joined the team of Bortolotti, the general manager of Media Records and suddenly reached the top of the hit parades.

1996

His single "FLY", published in 1996 with BXR Noise Maker, the label created by Media Records for Mediterranea progressive house, reached the top of the sales in Italy.

This was followed by his single "Gigi's Violin".

Subsequently, D'Agostino released the song "Angel's Symphony" with R.A.F. by Mauro Picotto, a friend from Media Records.

His biggest project was the self-titled debut album Gigi D'Agostino, consisting of 19 tracks, which sold over 60,000 copies.

After his rise to success, D'Agostino's musical style changed, with his sound becoming more melodic, at midway between house and progressive, with more energetic and melodious sonorities and less obsessive rhythms, also known as Italo dance.

1997

In 1997, he released the single "Gin Lemon", followed by "Your Love (Elisir)" (1998), "Cuba Libre" (1999), and "Bla Bla Bla" (1999).

He later released the album Eurodance Compilation, which contained five unpublished tracks.

1999

His biggest chart successes include "Bla Bla Bla", "Another Way", a cover of Nik Kershaw's "The Riddle", "La Passion", "Super" and "L'Amour Toujours", all in the years 1999 and 2000.

With this compilation, he earned a platinum disc and was awarded "Best Producer in 1999" at the Italian Dance Awards.

In October, D'Agostino released another hit single, entitled "Another Way".

In 1999, his album L'Amour Toujours (released in 2001 in the United States) included 23 tracks on two CDs, with the hit song "L'Amour Toujours" bringing him to the 10th position in the sales parade in Italy; as a result, he earned another Platinum Disc.

His 1999 single "Bla Bla Bla" became a major hit in Europe.

He described the single as "a piece I wrote thinking of all the people who talk and talk without saying anything!"

2000

In 2000, his remake of the Nik Kershaw song "The Riddle" sold 1,000,000 copies in Germany and 200,000 copies in France.

He also released the albums Tecno Fes (August 2000) and Tecno Fes - EP, Vol. 2 (December 2000).

2001

In 2001, he released L'Amour Toujours EP, consisting of three songs: two new versions of "L'amour Toujours" and "Un Giorno Credi", a single made in collaboration with Edoardo Bennato.

"Un Giorno Credi" reached the top of the parades in Italy and became one of the most played songs in the national and international music networks.

He was also awarded with "Best DJ-Producer of the Year" at the "Red Bull Awards" in Italy.

In 2001, he also released the hit "Super", as a result of a collaboration with Albertino (an Italian music artist), which won him the awards "Best Dance Producer" at the PIM (Italian Music Award) and "Public Award" at the Danish DJs Award in Copenhagen, Denmark.

In December of that year, he released Il Grande Viaggio, a compilation of his favourite songs, including old electronic pieces and new rhythms and melodies.

As a result, he was awarded with "Best Dance Producer" at the Italian Dance Awards.

2003

In 2003, he released the song "Ripassa" in the EP Underconstruction 1: Silence, a hit which is very important for his next productions.

This song helped influence Lento Violento, a subgenre that had yet to be distinguished.

2004

On 15 July 2004, his compilation "Euro Dance" won Platinum certification with 120,000 copies sold in just a few weeks.

In December 2004, D'Agostino released his fourth studio album, L'Amour Toujours II.D'Agostino has played in some well-known clubs throughout Europe, including in Italy, Spain, France, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, Germany, Switzerland, and England (in 1996, he played at the Ministry of Sound in London with Mauro Picotto).

2006

In 2006, he created his own new record label called "Noisemaker Hard" to differentiate the style of music released under his older record label, "Noisemaker".

2018

The hookline of "L'Amour Toujours" was also used for the 2018 hit remix/mashup "In My Mind".