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Italian musician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Domenico Serafino (also known as Serafino) is an Italian musician, composer, singer, and music producer. He released his debut album at the age of 20, featuring the song "Il mio Compare" (2001). His style blends funk, rock, and rap with Mediterranean influences.
This article contains wording that promotes the subject in a subjective manner without imparting real information. (May 2023) |
Domenico Serafino | |
---|---|
Personal details | |
Born | Domenico Serafino 19 March 1967[citation needed] Italy |
Occupation | Musician, singer, songwriter, music producer |
This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (May 2023) |
Serafino gained significant popularity in South America, particularly in the mid 1990s through the 2000s. His style is a fusion of rap, funk, and rock, with distinct African influence in both sound and aesthetic. The video for his 1999 song Ma Chi M'accompagna prominently featured former Italian international footballer Roberto Baggio.
From 2010 onwards, Serafino continued to perform live in various South American cities, while also working on new songs such as the Latin jazz ballad Flaca, the rocking Alleluia, and several other tracks. In November 2014, Serafino decided to cease his live performances after a concert at the Teatro Coliseo in Buenos Aires, choosing instead to focus entirely on music production. In the years that followed, he composed new songs, including Luna Nueva, Vamos America Latina, Dia de Aurora, Don Pasquale, A toda bronca, and Revolution Day, the latter of which was released on April 25, 2023.
In the summer of 2019, with then Cymru Premier club Bangor City in financial troubles via the then ownership of Vaughan Sports Management, new investment and ownership was being sought. By September a consortium of investors had taken control of Bangor and Serafino was installed as chairman.[1][2][3] Serafino brought in Argentine World Cup winner Pedro Pasculli as the new manager of the team.[4][5]
In April 2020, Serafino made a £5,000 donation to local hospital Ysbyty Gwynedd to help it fight the outbreak of coronavirus.[6] The club finished the inaugural Cymru North season in fifth place in a season curtailed by the COVID-19 pandemic with the final table determined on a points-per-game basis.
In April 2021, the club was refused a Tier 1 licence on the basis of a failure to provide the club's financial accounts as part of their application along with an issue in relation to coaching qualifications.[7]
Concerns over unpaid wages for club players and club officials were reported in the press In October 2021, who noted similarities to a situation in early 2021 at Sambenedettese.[8] The club were summoned by the Football Association of Wales to a disciplinary hearing over the matter.[9] The panel ruled that "all outstanding monies" must be paid within 31 days from 29 October 2021 – the club owed nearly £53,000 of unpaid wages to players and staff – with the sanction in the event of non-payment being the club would be banned "from all football related activity".[10] On 30 November the Football Association of Wales suspended the club from all football related activity after they failed to comply with the payment of outstanding monies.[11][12] As the club were suspended from football their Cymru North matches against five clubs were postponed between 30 November and February 2022, with the club docked three points for each missed match and also fined.
On 7 January 2022, it was announced by FAW that the club had not applied for a licence to compete in the tier 2 Cymru North for the 2022–23 season, or at tier 3 level.[13] On 14 January, the club's academy announced on social media that closing with immediate effect after no support was forthcoming from the club and there had been no concrete evidence from the FAW or the club that the situation at the club was going to improve.[14]
On 11 February, the FAW announced that the club had until 19 February to pay all outstanding fines or they would be immediately expelled from the Cymru North. It also announced that in the event the club paid outstanding fines, they would have to play all subsequent league fixtures or they would also face immediate expulsion from the league.[15]
"A club competing in the second tier of Welsh professional football" and "a club with a noteworthy history. They have had some spells in the international European tournaments" was shortly afterwards advertised for sale with asking price of £1.25 million.[16] The club was reported as Bangor City with the Daily Post noting the "eye-watering price" did not include the club's ground which was leased from the council.[17]
On 18 February, the club announced in an official statement by Serafino they had informed the FAW that they had withdrawn from the Cymru North for the 2021–22 season.[18] They also noted plans to return to play for the following season.[19] Later that day, the FAW confirmed that the club's withdrawal had been accepted and its playing record in the league for the season had been expunged.[20]
In June 2020, he was unveiled as the new owner and chairman of Italian Serie C side S.S. Sambenedettese Calcio.[21] He claimed to have paid former owner Franco Fedeli over 1.2 million euros for the club.[22] The deal was announced by the club on 10 June.[23]
In late March 2021, the club's players threatened to strike, and not play the match scheduled for Saturday 3 April in Matelica. A statement by the Italian Footballers Association, which published the press release, stated that the players had not received payment of the monthly salaries of November – December 2020 and January – February 2021 and that Sefarino had personally assured them that he would settle the arrears of salaries no later than Friday 2 April.[citation needed]
In April 2021, the club were docked four points from their current campaign due to unpaid player wages, fined €3,000 and Serafino was given a six-month suspension from running football clubs in a decision by the FIGC tribunal.[24] A pig's head was left outside Serafino's home in Italy with under it a photo of Serafino – it was believed this related to the lack of payment of players' wages.[25] In early April, five different companies sought bankruptcy petitions for non-payment of delivery of services.[26]
After Serafino's failure to comply with several financial requirements,[27] the club was declared bankrupt by the Court of Ascoli Piceno in May 2021.[28] Entrepreneur Roberto Renzi took over the club, it was refounded as A.S. Sambenedettese and, after repaying all debts, was formally accepted by the Italian Football Federation, rejoining in the Serie D league.[29]
Serafino's ownership of both clubs was part of a British Broadcasting Corporation Wales investigation, broadcast on UK television in May 2022. A few days later Serafino publicly denounced this television report, accusing his former partner and a group close to him, of having organized a defamatory press campaign, to weaken the figure of the President, causing serious economic and image damage to the Company and to his person. According to Serafino, the precise intention of his former partner Kim Dae Jung (Baram) was to cause the bankruptcy of Sambenedettese for personal gain, trying to buy it back at auction at a later time. Serafino declared that he was the victim of a real conspiracy to take the two clubs away from him,[30] after having created an academy, a sports center (Samba Village) and after having started a re-foundation of the Sambenedettese, a job until that moment appreciated by the fans.
This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (May 2023) |
Serafino is from Calabria in the south of Italy and a fan of Cosenza Calcio. Since 2009, he has lived in Buenos Aires, (Argentina)
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