Pink Project


Pink Project was a one-hit wonder dance, pop and Italo disco band active in the early 1980s. It was the brainchild of Italian DJ-composer-keyboardist-producer , together with guitarist Luciano Ninzatti, keyboardist-programmer Matteo Bonsanto and sound engineer Massimo Noè. Their only hit single, "Disco Project", was a mashup of Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall " and The Alan Parsons Project's "Mammagamma".

"Disco Project": the idea and the recording

The origins of "Disco Project" can be traced back to Pulga and Ninzatti's club nights as DJs. In early 1982, they realized that Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" and The Alan Parsons Project's equally popular "Mammagamma" were in the same tempo and, in some sections, in the same key. They proceeded to create a mix, opening with Parson's "Sirius", then going straight into "Mammagamma", over which an a cappella version of the children's choir from "Another Brick in the Wall" was superimposed, with the octave bass and steady drums from "Mammagamma" running all the way through.
With copyright issues preventing the two musicians from releasing the actual original tracks, they decided to play a mashup ex-novo with the aid of two top-notch session players, Ellade Bandini on drums and Pier Michelatti on bass. The vocals were performed by Italian-American vocalists Linda Wesley, Rossana Casale and Naimy Hackett and multi-tracked at a slightly faster speed to simulate a schoolchildren's choir. The choir also followed the key shift in the music of "Mammagamma", which was not present in the original mix by Pulga and Ninzatti, and the full album version features another key shift toward the end, which was also not in the original mix and was arranged by Pulga especially for the album track.
"Disco Project" was a major hit in Italy and Switzerland during the summer of 1982. Although Pink Project was meant to be a strictly anonymous act, similarly to Michael Cretu's 1990s project Enigma, the success of "Disco Project" forced the band to do a series of TV performances. The four musicians opted then for showing up dressed in black monk-like robes with black pointed hoods – reprising the theme adopted for the cover artwork of Pink Project's original 12-inch single. The TV performances also featured a small group of school children, loosely modeled after the children featured in Alan Parker's 1982 film Pink FloydThe Wall, lip-synching the lyrics. A postal address for Pink Project, a P.O. box located in Hamburg, was occasionally superimposed on screen; this was also partly fake, as the box belonged to the German office of their label, Baby Records. Ninzatti's excellent rendition of David Gilmour's guitar solo, coupled with the band's mysterious look, contributed to propagate a short-lived rumour in the Italian press that Pink Project were actually original members of Pink Floyd and The Alan Parsons Project in disguise.

Subsequent career and demise

After "Disco Project", Pink Project released a handful of singles and two albums, mostly composed of more mashups, borrowing from Jean Michel Jarre, The Police, Falco, Vangelis and Deep Purple. Two further singles, "B-Project" and "Hyper-Gamma-Oxygène", respectively taken from Pink Project's first and second albums Domino and Split, were minor hits in 1983, like their follow-up. Despite a substantial amount of radio play, the two albums failed to chart, and Pink Project eventually disbanded.
The albums and the singles, released by the Italian pop/dance label Baby Records, have gone out of print since then. In October 2013, the albums were made officially available again, in their entirety, on iTunes; however, the title and cover artwork of the Split album were changed to those of "B-Project", while the actual content of the album itself stayed the same.

Personnel