Last updated: 10 hours ago
Andrea Pizzo and the Purple Mice create cinematic electro-rock where science, imagination, and melody converge.
Blending bold electro-rock, orchestral textures, and narrative songwriting, the project draws inspiration from technology, philosophy, and science fiction, moving between emotional space-opera atmospheres and ironic, high-voltage storytelling.
Their latest single, Come Out Lazarus I – Life Is Over, marks the beginning of a new conceptual cycle titled People Zero. Inspired by a real story of loss and unexpected continuity, the song explores the fragile boundary between endings and rebirth, unfolding with a cinematic arc that shifts from introspective moments to luminous, dramatic rock passages.
The recent album Transhumanity (August 29, 2025) is a concept record about memory, artificial intelligence, and the evolving relationship between humans and machines. Widely praised for its creativity and depth, the album plays like a series of short sci-fi films, ranging from cosmic symphonies to playful, electrified songs about invention and progress.
With Andrea Pizzo and the Purple Mice, music becomes narrative: stories of science, myth, and imagination transformed into soundscapes that feel like small sci-fi movies — emotional, curious, and defiantly melodic.
Blending bold electro-rock, orchestral textures, and narrative songwriting, the project draws inspiration from technology, philosophy, and science fiction, moving between emotional space-opera atmospheres and ironic, high-voltage storytelling.
Their latest single, Come Out Lazarus I – Life Is Over, marks the beginning of a new conceptual cycle titled People Zero. Inspired by a real story of loss and unexpected continuity, the song explores the fragile boundary between endings and rebirth, unfolding with a cinematic arc that shifts from introspective moments to luminous, dramatic rock passages.
The recent album Transhumanity (August 29, 2025) is a concept record about memory, artificial intelligence, and the evolving relationship between humans and machines. Widely praised for its creativity and depth, the album plays like a series of short sci-fi films, ranging from cosmic symphonies to playful, electrified songs about invention and progress.
With Andrea Pizzo and the Purple Mice, music becomes narrative: stories of science, myth, and imagination transformed into soundscapes that feel like small sci-fi movies — emotional, curious, and defiantly melodic.
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