· By Edoardo Medici

Dunkan on Radio Bicocca: Inside the Conversation Behind “Saltando, Piango”

Dunkan on Radio Bicocca: Inside the Conversation Behind “Saltando, Piango”

Radio Bicocca Interview Artwork

When two artists come from entirely different musical worlds, the collision can either fall apart—or create something that feels alive. In the case of Dunkan and UTENTE175, their collaboration on Saltando, Piango proved to be the latter. To dig deeper into how the track was built, the duo sat down with Radio Bicocca for a candid, free-flowing conversation now available on Spotify.

The Meeting of Two Different Musical Languages

On the surface, Dunkan and UTENTE175 shouldn’t sound compatible. One works through melody, structure, and cross-market songwriting; the other arrives with a raw, instinct-driven approach shaped by alternative and experimental influences. But the interview makes it clear why their partnership works: both artists are driven by the urge to break familiar patterns.

The conversation digs into their creative DNA—UTENTE175’s unpredictable, emotion-first process versus Dunkan’s deliberate, storytelling-oriented writing style. What emerges is a portrait of two artists who push each other into unfamiliar territory without losing their identity.

How “Saltando, Piango” Took Shape

During the episode, they recount the making of the single with surprising honesty: early friction, unexpected synergy, and the moment the song finally “locked in” once they found a shared language between structure and chaos.

Dunkan speaks on how collaboration forces him to rethink melody and phrasing, especially when stepping into a world that isn’t built around traditional songwriting. UTENTE175 describes channeling emotional volatility into the track, embracing imperfections as texture rather than mistakes.

A Glimpse Into Dunkan’s Expanding Creative Arc

Beyond the single itself, the episode highlights Dunkan’s evolving role across the Italian and international scenes. His ability to move between writing, performing, and cross-genre collaboration is a recurring theme—something that’s becoming a defining part of his identity as both artist and songwriter.

The Radio Bicocca conversation doesn’t just promote a release; it documents a moment where two very different creative paths converge. Saltando, Piango is the final product, but the podcast gives listeners something more valuable: a window into how the song—and the partnership—actually came together.