
Massimo Milano (born 1967) is an Italianethnomusicologist,critic and soundexperimentalist.

Milano was born in 1967 inTurin. Member of "A.I.STU.GIA" (Italian Association for Japanese Studies, Venice) and of the International Jury of theDown Beat Annual Critics Poll (USA), he has been editor-in-chief of the monthly magazineFinis Terrae, for which he interviewed Zimbabwe's musical icon in exileThomas Mapfumo.[1] In addition, he regularly contributes to several Italian and Spanish leading newspapers and magazines (Il Manifesto,Classic Rock, Jam,Rumore, Jazzit, Il Giornale della Musica, Carnet, Amadeus,Playboy, Cuadernos de Jazz).
His activity also includes extensive studies, researches and essays on contemporary Brazilian music (Música popular brasileira), its social implications and its leading role in the collective imagination as a paradigm of the so-called "World" sound. He co-authored the "Encyclopedia of Rock",[2] recently re-published by Arcana Editrice, and during the 90's he actively collaborated as a consultant both forBlue Note artists the Doky Brothers and pianistNiels Lan Doky, for whom he wrote the liner notes for the album "Haitek Haiku",[3] produced byGino Vannelli. In 1998 he published a book of essays and conversations with Japanese composerRyuichi Sakamoto ("Ryuichi Sakamoto. Conversazioni"[4]), featuring a foreword byBanana Yoshimoto.
A year later he contributed with a semiological essay ("Transiti/Transits") to the catalog for the exhibition "Musica Senza Suono"[5] ("Soundless Music"), conceived and realized by producer Francesco Messina and critic Enzo Gentile for the Museo Revoltella in Trieste (Italy).
In 2003/2004 he settled inTokyo to conduct researches for theJapan Foundation in collaboration withKyoto University, under the supervision of philosopherAkira Asada, on the theme of the 'reversed exoticism' in modern Japan'.[6]
Since 2015, Milano hostsThe Tinseltown Tracks, a weekly radio show aired on Radio Flash 97.6, that has produced tenths of monographic broadcasts and boasts an audience that spans several countries around the world.
His upcoming projects include a short essay about the perception of Western pop culture in the Far East; a book aboutAlejandro Jodorowsky and his influence on thepsychedelic movement, the neo-mysticism and thecounterculture of the 1960s; and a self-produced DVD aboutJapan for which he's currently writing the music and the screenplay.