Domenico Serafino

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Domenico Serafino
Personal details
Born
Domenico Serafino

19/03/1967[citation needed]
Italy
OccupationMusician, singer, songwriter, music producer.

Domenico Serafino (aka Serafino) is an Italian musician, composer, singer, and music producer. He released his first album at the age of 20. With the song "Il mio Compare" (2001). For 11 months he remained at the top of the ranking of the most listened to songs of a popular music portal. His style is between funk, rock, rap, with Mediterranean influences. In Buenos Aires (Argentina), Serafino wrote and composed the songs performed in the last few years.

Music career[edit]

Serafino is a musician and music producer – and has had some popularity within South America during his musical career, particularly in the mid-1990s through to the 2000s. "His style defies conventional definitions, lying somewhere at the intersection of rap, funk and rock, with African influences in both sound and aesthetic". The video for his 1999 song Ma Chi M’accompagna features former Italian international footballer, Roberto Baggio.

1992 – First record-making experience: the magazine Tournèe produced the promotional CD "Albaria" and enclosed it to the magazine. Until 1994, Serafino made a series of concerts positively reviewed by the journalists of the sector.

1995 – In November the CD "Serafino" was published. The album contained a single, "Mina Vagante". It was broadcast by several radios. On June 7, Serafino played, with his band, in the Paolo Rossi show Il Circo. On Dec. 22, at the Teatro Smeraldo in Milan, he opened Jesus Christ Superstar, the musical.

1996 – He presented “Suono Vitale”, a music TV program for a private TV broadcasting circuit together with Ilaria Paganini. On Dec. 24, he made a sound performance, in Piazza Duca D'Aosta, in Milan. TG3 broadcast an interview with Serafino. In those years, Serafino strived together with Mimmo Ferrante against architectural and cultural barriers which trouble the disabled.Many impressive initiatives were shot by the nation-wide media. Ferrante, the dearest friend of the musician, died in December 1996 due to a very serious form of muscle dystrophy.

1997 – On Dec. 4, the CD "Provare per credere" is presented. Serafino both wrote music and interpreted the piece with the vocal support of top artists like Franca Rame, Paolo Rossi, Claudio Bisio and Pino Scotto. This project was meant to be tribute a Mimmo Ferrante. Always in December, the singer participated to Telethon (RAIDUE) with the song "Mi dichiaro in arresto" and to “Help” a Red Ronnie programme. It is also worth mentioning the review on “Tutto Musica” with the interview to Paolo Rossi and Serafino.

1998 – On Jan. 28, a Serafino concert at Palavobis in Milano opened a week of celebration in honour of Ghandi. In October the Cinquestelle circuit began to cross the South of Italy, a program called Sudando Musica, a container of trips to discover talents in the southern regions who, through television, tell the ups and downs of an artist’s life. Serafino lead and improvised a jam session with his colleagues … La theme song of the programme is the song "Mi converto". On Dec. 16, Fuego (ITALIA 1) presented as an avant-première the Videoclip "Chi mi accompagna?". An exclusive interview to the football player Roberto Baggio was broadcast and Serafino managed to make the football player rap on a pressing involving music; the initiative, coordinated by Luca Bonato, belonged to an awareness-raising campaign promoted ANFFAS to review a law for those affected by serious mental troubles.

1999 – On Feb. 2, a single "Chi mi accompagna?" was officially distributed (RTI): RAI, MEDIASET and many private TV networks gave a wide space to the event with many reports; nameplates like TV Sorrisi & Canzoni, Corriere della Sera, la Repubblica, il Mattino, La Stampa and La gazzetta dello Sport published many reviews, also due to a press release by ANSA. During the 49th San Remo Festival, on Feb. 26, Serafino held a performance at the Video and Radio Italia Solo Musica Italiana space that began satellite broadcasting of the Videoclip with Baggio. In the month of July, Serafino was the lead of a really original event: in Fuscaldo, a small town in the Calabria hinterland, a real people’s petition was made to the local town councillors to ask to organise a concert of the singer-songwriter who would perform on Aug. 8, on an overcrowded waterfront.

In January 2000, Serafino was invited as guest at many emissions of the TV programme Casa Mosca, presented by Maurizio Mosca, where he proposed his music with acoustic live performances. On Feb. 26, he was again in Sanremo but as a guest, with his band in full force, at the Sanremo Rock Festival event. The recording of new songs began as well as an artistic co-operation with the actress Bedy Moratti who lent her voice in an atmosphere piece titled "Cerco Spiegazioni" to be launched on the web. Late in the year, Serafino was recognized as the best emerging artist of Mediterranean music.

2001 – Unplugged concerts confirmed the versatility and the talent of an artist who began to be appreciated by World-fame artists as Tullio De Piscopo. Serafino began to work with the Neapolitan percussion player and singer. In Aprica, they played on the same stage to liberated pure music energy and adrenaline. The single "Il mio Compare" was broadcast overseas since May 7 by a Boston-based US Station (USA), Radio 740 AM; this same piece got to the top of a special hit on the portal www.mp3.it for the high number of downloads and, since the month of November, also Italian radios started to broadcast it. In the same month, the Videoclip "Il mio Compare" was shot in the town of Cetraro. The video-clip makers were the students of the School of Art of Cetraro.

2002 – On May 3 the CD "Uè compà" was presented at the Classico Village in Rome,[1] an EP with four new songs, available on the web only. In the summer, Serafino got the top of the Italian Hit of Vitaminic. The success of the Serafino pieces continued on the Web, as a matter of fact there were tens of thousands of downloads and the piece “Naviga nella rete”, launched as a promotion on Vitaminic, remained at the top of the etnofunk hit for several weeks. A new version of the song “Chi mi accompagna?” got the top of the hit on the Italian hits on that same portal.

2003 – On June 30, with Swing label, distributed by Self, the single piece “Naviga nella rete”[2] was published. In August Serafino took part as a guest to Girofestival broadcast by the RAI TV channels, at TimTour in the stage of Palermo and to NordSudOvestEst on RAIDUE.

2004 – The Suoneria Mediterranea project was finally implemented with the new music program edited by Serafino and broadcast on Telespazio 1, a container inside “E’ sempre Domenica” presented by Paolo Giura and Luigi Grandinetti. On may 10, “VERISSIMO” (Canale 5) broadcast an interview of Serafino, made in Calabria, the region where he lives. “A Sud io migrerò” became the theme song of a summer program “La mappa dei piaceri” daily broadcast by Telespazio from June to September.

2005 – In February, the piece "100% Calabrese Sugnu" jumps 1st place of the best sold song on Vitaminic, and in May 23 the single "Very Etnico" begins to be radio-broadcast in Italy; on June 19, RadioRai1 proposed an interview and three albums in avant-premiere. From June 20, "A Sud io migrerò" was again the theme music of "La mappa dei piaceri". The song "Il Cinematografo" became the sound track of the Magna Graecia Film Festival. On Aug. 22, in Decollatura, " guest of " Ad esempio a me piace il Sud! To recall the late Rino Gaetano.

2006 – On Jan. 13, on Telespazio 1, the new TV series "Suoneria Mediterranea", resumed. It is the music program devised by Serafino, and devoted to artists and productions made in the South. On Jan. 23, the Album "Very Etnico" [3] was in music shops and, on Feb. 5 tours began in Naples to promote the new CD. "Arabica Café" was the single piece broadcast by the Italian radios. On May 4, Serafino played in the Auditorium of Popolare Network in Milan in National Live. On Aug. 1 RAINEWS 24 presented the new videoclip with an interview to the rasta, broadcast again by RAITRE. On Nov. 12, Serafino played in Argentina in the Hugo del Carril amphitheatre in Buenos Aires, and on the 19th he performed again at the Coliseum Theatre of the same town.[4]

2007 - l On New Year's Day, Serafino flies to South America to play, with the full band, in some cities on the Atlantic coast. Great turnout of the public in his concerts. On January 25, from Mar del Plata, he is a guest of AMERICA TV in the program by Mirtha Legrand. On October 9 "Very Etnico" is released + the single "Guapa!" in the South American market. On November 3, concert at the Plaza theater in Montevideo (Uruguay) and, in the same month, the tour touches Buenos Aires, Avellaneda, Las Grutas and Puerto Madryn in Patagonia. Exclusive interview with Canal de la Musica, in the Buenos Aires studios.

2008 - On February 10 and 12, Serafino played in front of 80,000 people in the Las Toscas area, in Mar del Plata. Radio tour in South America to promote the single "Guapa!".

2009 - On January 4, shooting of the single "Yo soy italiano" begins in Buenos Aires. Throughout the year, Serafino works on the songs of the new CD, recording most of his songs in South America.

2010 - Recordings continue between the Mediterranean and South America. "Yo soy italiano" becomes the theme song of Cantagiro [5] and the single has been online since April. On November 27, a new tour starts from Mendoza to present some of the new songs contained in "Mediterranea Onda".

From 2010 onwards Serafino continued to play live in various cities of South America,[6] producing music and writing songs such as the Latin jazz ballad "Flaca", the rocking "Alleluia", but from November 2014 (concert at the Teatro Coliseo in Buenos Aires), Serafino has decided to no longer perform live concert activities to devote himself entirely to productions. In the following years the singer-songwriter wrote songs such as "Luna Nueva", "Vamos America Latina", "Dia de Aurora", "Don Pasquale", "A toda bronca" or "Revolution Day" (published on April 25, 2023).

Football chairman and owner[edit]

Bangor City[edit]

In the summer of 2019, with then Cymru Premier club Bangor City in financial troubles via the then ownership of Vaughan Sports Management, new investment and ownership was being sought. By September a consortium of investors had taken control of Bangor and Serafino was installed as chairman.[7][8][9] Serafino brought in Argentine World Cup winner Pedro Pasculli as the new manager of the team.[10][11]

In April 2020 Serafino made a £5,000 donation to local hospital Ysbyty Gwynedd to help it fight the outbreak of coronavirus.[12] The club finished the inaugural Cymru North season in fifth place in a season curtailed by the COVID-19 pandemic with the final table determined on a points-per-game basis.

In April 2021 the club was refused a Tier 1 licence on the basis of a failure to provide the club's financial accounts as part of their application along with an issue in relation to coaching qualifications.[13]

Concerns over unpaid wages for club players and club officials were reported in the press In October 2021, who noted similarities to a situation in early 2021 at Sambenedettese.[14] The club were summoned by the Football Association of Wales to a disciplinary hearing over the matter.[15] The panel ruled that "all outstanding monies" must be paid within 31 days from 29 October 2021 – the club owed nearly £53,000 of unpaid wages to players and staff – with the sanction in the event of non-payment being the club would be banned "from all football related activity".[16] On 30 November the Football Association of Wales suspended the club from all football related activity after they failed to comply with the payment of outstanding monies.[17][18] As the club were suspended from football their Cymru North matches against five clubs were postponed between 30 November and February 2022, with the club docked three points for each missed match and also fined.

On 7 January 2022 it was announced by FAW that the club had not applied for a licence to compete in the tier 2 Cymru North for the 2022–23 season, or at tier 3 level.[19] On 14 January the club's academy announced on social media that closing with immediate effect after no support was forthcoming from the club and there had been no concrete evidence from the FAW or the club that the situation at the club was going to improve.[20]

On 11 February the FAW announced that the club had until 19 February to pay all outstanding fines or they would be immediately expelled from the Cymru North. It also announced that in the event the club paid outstanding fines, they would have to play all subsequent league fixtures or they would also face immediate expulsion from the league.[21]

"A club competing in the second tier of Welsh professional football" and "a club with a noteworthy history. They have had some spells in the international European tournaments" was shortly afterwards advertised for sale with asking price of £1.25 million.[22] The club was reported as Bangor City with the Daily Post noting the "eye-watering price" did not include the club's ground which was leased from the council.[23]

On 18 February the club announced in an official statement by Serafino they had informed the FAW that they had withdrawn from the Cymru North for the 2021–22 season.[24] They also noted plans to return to play for the following season.[25] Later that day, the FAW confirmed that the club's withdrawal had been accepted and its playing record in the league for the season had been expunged.[26]

Sambenedettese[edit]

In June 2020 he was unveiled as the new owner and chairman of Italian Serie C side S.S. Sambenedettese Calcio.[27] He claimed to have paid former owner Franco Fedeli over 1.2 million euros for the club.[28] The deal was announced by the club on 10 June.[29]

In late March 2021 the club's players threatened to strike, and not play the match scheduled for Saturday 3 April in Matelica. A statement by the Italian Footballers Association, which published the press release, stated that the players had not received payment of the monthly salaries of November – December 2020 and January – February 2021 and that Sefarino had personally assured them that he would settle the arrears of salaries no later than Friday 2 April.[citation needed]

In April 2021 the club were docked four points from their current campaign due to unpaid player wages, fined €3,000 and Serafino was given a six-month suspension from running football clubs in a decision by the FIGC tribunal.[30] A pig's head was left outside Serafino's home in Italy with under it a photo of Serafino – it was believed this related to the lack of payment of players' wages.[31] In early April, five different companies sought bankruptcy petitions for non-payment of delivery of services.[32]

After Serafino's failure to comply with several financial requirements,[33] the club was declared bankrupt by the Court of Ascoli Piceno in May 2021.[34] Entrepreneur Roberto Renzi took over the club, it was refounded as A.S. Sambenedettese and, after repaying all debts, was formally accepted by the Italian Football Federation, rejoining in the Serie D league.[35]

Journalism investigation[edit]

Serafino's ownership of both clubs was part of a British Broadcasting Corporation Wales investigation, broadcast on UK television in May 2022. A few days later Serafino publicly denounced this television report, accusing his former partner and a group close to him, of having organized a defamatory press campaign, to weaken the figure of the President, causing serious economic and image damage to the Company and to his person. According to Serafino, the precise intention of his former partner Kim Dae Jung (Baram) was to cause the bankruptcy of Sambenedettese for personal gain, trying to buy it back at auction at a later time. Serafino declared that he was the victim of a real conspiracy to take the two Clubs away from him,[36] after having created a Academy, a sports center (Samba Village) and after having started a re-foundation of the Sambenedettese, a job until that moment appreciated by the fans.

Personal life[edit]

Serafino is from Calabria in the south of Italy and a fan of Cosenza Calcio. From 2009 he lives in Buenos Aires (Argentina)

References[edit]

  1. ^ https://www.rockol.it/news-43649/comunicato-stampa-nuovo-ep-per-serafino
  2. ^ https://www.rockol.it/news-56104/serafino-e-il-suo-inno-a-internet
  3. ^ https://content.suono.it/recensione-musica/serafino-very-etnico/
  4. ^ https://www.adnkronos.com/Archivio/AdnAgenzia/2006/11/09/Spettacolo/Musica/MUSICA-IL-CANTAUTORE-SERAFINO-RAPPRESENTA-LA-CALABRIA-IN-ARGENTINA_125530.php
  5. ^ https://www.informazione.it/c/5BBF812E-2FF8-42C5-84F2-D1054F9EA91A/Yo-soy-italiano-di-Serafino-nuova-sigla-del-Cantagiro
  6. ^ http://www.primerafuente.com.ar/noticia/837127-serafino-un-musico-italiano-que-se-encanto-con-tucuman
  7. ^ "Club Takeover Confirmed".
  8. ^ 2 Sep, The Bangor Aye |; News, 2019 | Bangor; Business; Sport | 0 | (2 September 2019). "Bangor City confirm club takeover by Italian consortium". The Bangor Aye. Retrieved 16 June 2020. {{cite web}}: |last2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ "Bangor City FC takeover formally announced as Dominico Serafino becomes chairman". North Wales Chronicle. 3 September 2019. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  10. ^ "Pedro Pasculli: Bangor City appoint World Cup winner as new manager". BBC Sport. 5 October 2019. Retrieved 3 November 2019.
  11. ^ "Pedro Pasculli: from Maradona's World Cup roommate to Bangor City manager". The Guardian. 16 October 2019. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  12. ^ "Bangor City president Serafino makes £5,000 donation to intensive care unit at Ysbyty Gwynedd". North Wales Chronicle. 29 March 2020. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  13. ^ Jones, Dave (9 April 2021). "Bangor City slammed by board advisor over licence failure". Grassroots North Wales. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  14. ^ Loader, Gwyn (2 October 2021). "Bangor City FC: Worries over club's unpaid debts". BBC Sport/ Newyddion S4C. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
  15. ^ Loader, Gwyn (15 October 2021). "Bangor City FC summoned to hearing over unpaid wages". BBC Sport/ Newyddion S4C. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
  16. ^ "Bangor City face football ban over unpaid wages". BBC. 29 October 2021. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
  17. ^ Lewis, Thomas (30 November 2021). "Bangor City FC suspended from all football activity over unpaid wages dispute". Daily Post. North Wales Live. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  18. ^ "Bangor City handed football ban by FAW over unpaid wages". BBC Sport. 30 November 2021. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  19. ^ "Bangor City: Suspended former Welsh champions did not seek Cymru North licence for next season". BBC Sport. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  20. ^ "Academy Statement". Twitter. Bangor City FC Academy. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  21. ^ "FAW issues Bangor City update". Football Association of Wales. 11 February 2022. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
  22. ^ "100 Year Old Welsh Football Club For Sale". businessforsales.com. Archived from the original on 14 February 2022. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
  23. ^ Lewis, Thomas (15 February 2022). "Bangor City FC listed for sale for eye-watering price as clock ticks on league expulsion". North Wales Live. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  24. ^ "Official Statement: 18 February 2022". Facebook. Bangor City FC. 18 February 2022. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  25. ^ "Bangor City rock Welsh football after withdrawal from the Cymru North". Y Clwb Pel-Droed. 18 February 2022. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  26. ^ "FAW Board confirms Bangor City withdrawal from JD Cymru North". Football Association of Wales. 18 February 2022. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  27. ^ "Domenico Serafino è il nuovo presidente della Sambenedettese" (in Italian). NoiSamb.it. 10 June 2020. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  28. ^ Perotti, Nazzareno (13 June 2020). "Domenico Serafino: "Voglio far tornare la Samb ai fasti del passato, ho dato a Fedeli oltre 1,2 milioni"" (in Italian). Riviera Oggi. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  29. ^ "UFFICIALE – Domenico Serafino è il nuovo presidente della Samb" (in Italian). TuttoC. 10 June 2020. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  30. ^ Campanale, Susy (28 April 2021). "Sambendettese docked points". Football Italia. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  31. ^ Amoruso, Alessandro (2 April 2021). "Crisi Sambenedettese, testa di maiale davanti all'abitazione del presidente Serafino" (in Italian). SPORTface.it. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  32. ^ Piazzolla, Antonio (8 April 2021). "5 aziende presenteranno istanza di fallimento per la Sambenedettese" (in Italian). lagoleada.it. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  33. ^ "La Samb adesso è ad un passo dal fallimento" (in Italian). lagoleada.it. 24 April 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  34. ^ "Istanza di fallimento per la Samb? "Serafino è sparito" e intanto Felleca…" (in Italian). lagoleada.it. 5 May 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  35. ^ "COMUNICATO UFFICIALE N. 260/A" (PDF) (in Italian). FIGC. 10 June 2021. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  36. ^ https://www.tuttomercatoweb.com/altre-notizie/serafino-torna-a-farsi-sentire-jung-ha-agito-contro-di-me-causando-il-fallimento-della-samb-1687398

External links[edit]