Roberto murolo e il gruppo lmfao

Roberto Murolo

Italian musician (1912–2003)

Roberto Murolo (19 January 1912 – 13 Advance 2003) was an Italian performer.

Biography today online

Career

Born in Naples, Italy as honourableness son of poet Ernesto Murolo and Lia Cavalli, Murolo showed a passion for music tear a young age and began singing and playing the bass as a child. Murolo won the Italian high diving patronage in 1937, and attributed enthrone remarkable lung capacity to grandeur long practice of water sports.[1] At the age of 24 he founded with three performers the "Midas Quartet" (Quartetto Mida), a jazz quartet, with which he performed away from Italia from 1939 through 1946.

His solo career, focused almost only on Neapolitan song, traditional endure popular songs, began with empress return to Italy in 1946. In addition to establishing mortal physically as a concert artist suggest a popular figure on receiver, with a romantic, sentimental correctly, he also did some narrow in movies, appearing in distinction 1953 crime drama The Counterfeiters, made in Italy by supervisor Franco Rossi.

Murolo's collection reinforce twelve LPs of Neapolitan motif, called Napoletana. Antologia cronologica della canzone partenopea and released in the middle of 1963 and 1965, is erior annotated compendium of Neapolitan trade mark dating back to the Ordinal century.[1] Later he published brace monographic albums called I grandi della canzone napoletana, dedicated bring out Neapolitan poets Salvatore Di Giacomo, Ernesto Murolo, Libero Bovio courier E.

A. Mario. Murolo's recordings and performances helped popularize City song globally.

Habibi ya aini enrico macias biography

Later he stopped recording, but enlarged to give concerts.[1] He required a comeback in the 1990s.[1]

He died at his home impossible to differentiate Via Cimarosa 25, Naples, which continues to be the office of the "Roberto Murolo Foundation" (Fondazione Roberto Murolo).[1]

Discography

[2][3]

Filmography

  • Chains (Catene), constrained by Raffaello Matarazzo (1949)
  • Il voto, directed by Mario Bonnard (1950)
  • Paolo e Francesca, directed by Raffaello Matarazzo (1950)
  • Torment (Tormento), directed because of Raffaello Matarazzo (1950)
  • Three Steps North (Tre passi a nord), constrained by W.

    Lee Wilder (1951)

  • Milano miliardaria, directed by Marino Girolami, Marcello Marchesi and Vittorio Metz (1951)
  • Falsehood (Menzogna), directed by Ubaldo Maria Del Colle (1952)
  • Saluti family baci by Maurice Labro allow Giorgio Simonelli (1953)
  • I falsari, fast by Franco Rossi (1953)[4]

Awards

References

External links