The city serves as a living character in the music video.
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As the music swelled, the two voices merged. Anthony’s high, piercing laments were grounded by Tommy’s gravelly, powerful baritone. They moved through the streets together, past the murals of Maradona and the crowded cafes. The video captured the raw essence of Neapolitan life: the grit, the passion, and the unbreakable bond of community. Learn more about the career of Tommy Riccio or Anthony
The song, "Tu nun ti ha perdere" (You Must Not Lose Yourself), began as a conversation between a mentor and a protégé. Anthony sang of a woman who had walked away, taking his peace with her. He described the suffocating silence of his room and the way every corner of Naples seemed to whisper her name. He was spiraling, ready to let his life unravel for a love that had already turned to ash. They moved through the streets together, past the
Tommy Riccio, a legend of the neomelodico scene, stood on the balcony of an old stone building. His voice, seasoned by years of singing about the struggles and joys of the city, carried a weight of wisdom. Below him, Anthony—the rising star with the soulful eyes and the modern flair—paced the square, his phone clutched in a hand that trembled with the ghost of a lost love.
Tommy leaned over the railing, his voice cutting through the young man’s despair like a lighthouse through a Mediterranean fog. He didn’t offer empty platitudes. He sang of the "malattia d'amore" (the sickness of love) as something he had survived himself.