Giovanna Chicco E Deborah Cali Sequenza Hot Sexy Igorevy Production -

Silence. Then, Deborah laughed—not cruelly, but softly. “Oh, babe. My voice literally quit on me when my last band walked out. You think I’m scared of a broken piano?”

That night, Deborah stayed late. She didn’t write. She just listened as Giovanna played a new melody—tentative, searching, with that dissonant C#. Deborah smiled. “There you are.”

“Then you write a better one.”

Giovanna’s fingers froze on the keys. No one had ever accused her of being afraid of sound. That was her thing—she controlled sound. Deborah, she realized, had just seen right through her. Silence

But one night, after a fight about a single chord (Deborah wanted a dissonant C#; Giovanna wanted a safe C), Deborah slammed her notebook shut. “Why won’t you let anyone in?”

The studio was a sterile white box. Giovanna loved it. No distractions, just a grand piano and the silence she needed to think. Deborah hated it. She needed graffiti, cigarette smoke, and a cluttered floor to feel alive.

“About the space between two people who are too scared to touch.” My voice literally quit on me when my last band walked out

Giovanna took the mic. “Every love song you’ve ever heard is about trying to find your way back to someone. Deborah wrote the lyrics. I just finally learned to sing along.”

But the real test came at the album’s launch. A journalist asked Giovanna, “Are you and Deborah just collaborators, or is there a story there?”

They started finishing each other’s sentences. She just listened as Giovanna played a new

The album became a secret map of their relationship. Track 4 was the first argument (“C# and Misery”). Track 7 was the rainstorm (“No Power, No Walls”). Track 9 was a wordless piano solo that Giovanna wrote after their first night together—Deborah had cried hearing it, because it was the sound of someone finally letting go of fear.

“It’s a coffin,” Deborah shot back. “Where’s the fight? Where’s the anger turning into sunrise? You write like you’re afraid to make a sound.”