“7 Miliardi” throws you into Massimo Pericolo’s gritty world of street hustle, restless ambition, and unfiltered rebellion. The rapper lists every blunt reality: friends sliding into addiction, brushes with the police, dead-end jobs, and the feeling that society’s rules are rigged against him. Over pounding beats he spits about selling drugs, skipping school, and ditching traditional goals, all while craving “sette miliardi” ‑ an impossible pile of cash big enough to buy freedom from a future that looks hopeless. His lines swing between dark humor and raw frustration, showing a young man who is both self-confident and painfully aware of his own fragility.
At its core, the song is a loud refusal to play by anyone else’s game. Pericolo mocks conventional success, scoffs at politics, and finds pride in the very vices that mainstream society condemns. Yet beneath the swagger you hear desperation: he wants more than survival, he wants significance, and his only visible path is money and music. That push-and-pull between bravado and vulnerability makes “7 Miliardi” a fierce snapshot of a generation that feels ignored, angry, and ready to fight for a life that feels truly their own.