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Mare, Luna e d’intorni – The
Golden Age of Neapolitan Song
see end of review for track listing
Luciano Catapano
(tenor and guitar); Gino Evangelista (mandolin)
rec. live, Eglise St-Nicolas, Rougemont, Switzerland, June 2006
Notes and texts in Italian and English. CLAVES
502618 [60:42]
Too
often we hear Neapolitan songs in heavily over-arranged
versions and, sometimes, sung in too grandly operatic a
manner. Too often we hear Neapolitan songs performed in
Standard Italian (or even a kind of mid-Atlantic Italian),
rather than in the dialect in which many of the best of
them were written. And it isn’t only non-Italians who are ‘guilty’ – I
remember listening to a recording of Pavarotti singing
Neapolitan ‘favourites’ with a friend from Naples; though
he admired the voice my friend couldn’t stop laughing at
Pavarotti’s North-Italian attempts to negotiate the distinctive
Neapolitan sounds of the texts.
It
is pleasant, thus, to hear some familiar (and some unfamiliar)
songs from the city of Parthenope sung and played in intimate
fashion, never overblown or emotionally milked beyond their
true nature, by two thoroughgoing Neapolitans.
Luciano
Catapano has a light tenor voice which he uses intelligently
and sensitively. To fully appreciate his singing one has
to work quite hard at the texts provided (though I have
described them above as being in Italian they are, in fact,
in Neapolitan, a dialect which most Italians themselves
would sometimes find hard to comprehend) and the accompanying
translations. Study the lyrics carefully and one realises
with what unpretentious subtlety Catapano interprets them.
As
instrumentalists both Catapano and the mandolinist Gino
Evangelista play with rhythmic certainty and flexibility
and with an unforced poetry – there is much less overt
sentimentality here than some will associate with ‘Neapolitan
song’.
There
are songs here by such important figures as Raffaele Viviani,
actor, musician, dramatist and much else, a major figure
on the Neapolitan theatrical and musical scene, whose plays
are attracting increasing attention – in their own time
their images of life amongst the Neapolitan poor were admired
by figures such as Gorky. There is work by the classical
pianist Enrico de Leva, who worked with Tosti and by the
poet and dramatist Salvatore di Giacomo.
The
live performance is atmospheric, and the audience are guilty
of very few distractions so far as the home listener is
concerned. The CD comes with full texts and translations
and a brief, suggestive essay by Antonin Scherrer on the
nature of Neapolitan song and the significance of the images
of moon and sea around which the programme has, in effect,
been constructed. Unfortunately, however, the booklet offers
absolutely no information whatsoever on the composers and
lyricists. I have, above, supplied such information as
I have been able to, without undertaking a quantity of
research out of proportion to the (real enough) charms
of this very pleasant CD. Where possible I have also supplied
dates for the songs.
Track listing SalvatoreDi GIACOMO (1860-1934) / Pasquale Maria COSTA (1858-1933)
Catari’ (1892) [3:45] Traditional
Mare ‘e Margellina (1912) [2:40]
Tarantella (instrumental) [1:41] Raffaele VIVIANI(1888-1950)
’o vapore [1:44]
Quanno jarraie a spusa (1911) [3:21] Salvatore Di GIACOMO (1860-1934) /
Pasquale Maria COSTA (1858-1933)
’e spingule frangese (1888) [3:35] Edoardo NICOLARDI (1878-1954) /
Evemero NARDELLA(1878-1950) ’mmiez’ô ggrano (1909) [4:32] Giacomo ROSSINI (1792-1868) LaDanza (instrumental) (1835)
[3:59] Salvatore Di GIACOMO (1860-1934) / Pasquale Maria COSTA (1858-1933)
Era de Maggio (1885) [4:17] RaffaeleVIVIANI(1888-1950) Lavannarè’!.[3:31]
Tarantella segreta [2:20] G. de LUCA (1876-1950) / Francesco BUONGIOVANNI (1872-1940)
’a cartulina ’e Napule (1927) [3:08] E.del
PRETE / Pietro LABRIOLA (1820-1881)
Lo cardillo (1950?) [4:38] M. diGALDIERI
(1877-1923) / G. BONAVOLANTÀ
Serenatella a na cumpagna ’e scola (1947) [2:57] LiberoBOVIO (1883-1942) /
Enrico CANNIO (1875-1949)
’a serenata ’e Pulicenella (1916) [3:23] Salvatore DI GIACOMO (1860-1934) / E. A. MARIO (1884-1961)
Miérolo affurtunato (1946) [4:08] O. diGALLO
/ Mario PERSICO (1892-1977)
’e palumme (1913) [2:40] Traditional
Monte marano (instrumental) [4:12]
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