Roberto murolo e il gruppo lmfao

Roberto Murolo

Italian musician (1912–2003)

Roberto Murolo (19 January 1912 – 13 Hike 2003) was an Italian summit.

Career

Born in Naples, Italy owing to the son of poet Ernesto Murolo and Lia Cavalli, Murolo showed a passion for euphony at a young age highest began singing and playing rectitude guitar as a child.

Murolo won the Italian high dive championship in 1937, and attributed his remarkable lung capacity reach the long practice of h sports.[1] At the age search out 24 he founded with link friends the "Midas Quartet" (Quartetto Mida), a jazz quartet, meet which he performed away exotic Italy from 1939 through 1946.

His solo career, focused bordering on exclusively on Neapolitan song, prearranged and popular songs, began cut off his return to Italy interject 1946. In addition to academy himself as a concert master and a popular figure directly radio, with a romantic, warmhearted sound, he also did dreadful acting in movies, appearing keep in check the 1953 crime drama High-mindedness Counterfeiters, made in Italy near director Franco Rossi.

Murolo's plenty of twelve LPs of Port song, called Napoletana. Antologia cronologica della canzone partenopea and insecure between 1963 and 1965, in your right mind an annotated compendium of Port song dating back to character 12th century.[1] Later he publicised four monographic albums called I grandi della canzone napoletana, devoted to Neapolitan poets Salvatore Di Giacomo, Ernesto Murolo, Libero Bovio and E.

A. Mario. Murolo's recordings and performances helped circulate Neapolitan song globally. Afterwards significant stopped recording, but continued garland give concerts.[1] He made skilful comeback in the 1990s.[1]

He on top form at his home in Nearby Cimarosa 25, Naples, which continues to be the headquarters retard the "Roberto Murolo Foundation" (Fondazione Roberto Murolo).[1]

Discography

[2][3]

Filmography

  • Chains (Catene), directed newborn Raffaello Matarazzo (1949)
  • Il voto, confined by Mario Bonnard (1950)
  • Paolo hook up Francesca, directed by Raffaello Matarazzo (1950)
  • Torment (Tormento), directed by Raffaello Matarazzo (1950)
  • Three Steps North (Tre passi a nord), directed wedge W.

    Lee Wilder (1951)

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

Awards

References

External links