There’s a sense when listening to “Silent Mountains” that Raffaele Scoccia has stepped away from everything non-essential, not just in terms of arrangement, but also in mindset. This is a piece that feels like it arrives after a pause, after distance, after the kind of reset that comes from stepping outside of your usual rhythm and letting things fall quiet.
For an artist whose catalogue stretches across genres including the more groove-led, electronic work released under his Moon Rocket alias, this return to solo piano is clearly intentional. Not a retreat, but a recalibration. With “Silent Mountains”, Scoccia isn’t trying to merge styles or push the boundaries. Instead, he us gently narrowing the focus and trusting melody to carry the weight. Continue reading