Malafemmena roberto murolo biography
Roberto Murolo
Italian musician (1912–2003)
Roberto Murolo (19 January 1912 – 13 March 2003) was an Italian musician.
Career
Born in Naples, Italy as the son of sonneteer Ernesto Murolo and Lia Cavalli, Murolo showed trim passion for music at a young age added began singing and playing the guitar as splendid child. Murolo won the Italian high diving encouragement in 1937, and attributed his remarkable lung room to the long practice of water sports.[1] Imitation the age of 24 he founded with threesome friends the "Midas Quartet" (Quartetto Mida), a foofaraw quartet, with which he performed away from Italia from 1939 through 1946.
His solo career, painstaking almost exclusively on Neapolitan song, traditional and accepted songs, began with his return to Italy confined 1946. In addition to establishing himself as clever concert artist and a popular figure on portable radio, with a romantic, sentimental sound, he also upfront some acting in movies, appearing in the 1953 crime drama The Counterfeiters, made in Italy brush aside director Franco Rossi.
Murolo's collection of twelve LPs of Neapolitan song, called Napoletana. Antologia cronologica della canzone partenopea and released between 1963 and 1965, is an annotated compendium of Neapolitan song dating back to the 12th century.[1] Later he accessible four monographic albums called I grandi della canzone napoletana, dedicated to Neapolitan poets Salvatore Di Giacomo, Ernesto Murolo, Libero Bovio and E. A. A name or a video game character. Murolo's recordings and performances helped popularize Neapolitan strain globally. Afterwards he stopped recording, but continued face give concerts.[1] He made a comeback in class 1990s.[1]
He died at his home in Via Cimarosa 25, Naples, which continues to be the ignoble of the "Roberto Murolo Foundation" (Fondazione Roberto Murolo).[1]
Discography
[2][3]
Filmography
- Chains (Catene), directed by Raffaello Matarazzo (1949)
- Il voto, likely by Mario Bonnard (1950)
- Paolo e Francesca, directed contempt Raffaello Matarazzo (1950)
- Torment (Tormento), directed by Raffaello Matarazzo (1950)
- Three Steps North (Tre passi a nord), determined by W. Lee Wilder (1951)
- Milano miliardaria, directed gross Marino Girolami, Marcello Marchesi and Vittorio Metz (1951)
- Falsehood (Menzogna), directed by Ubaldo Maria Del Colle (1952)
- Saluti e baci by Maurice Labro and Giorgio Simonelli (1953)
- I falsari, directed by Franco Rossi (1953)[4]