La Traiettorie Delle Mongolfiere - Gianmaria Testa
Carina - Nicola Arigliano
After the chaos and destruction of World War II and the conservative musical environment Italian leaders promoted, the Italian public was ready for a more relaxed sound. Jazz, swing and boogie-woogie were achieving worldwi... more »de popularity and merged with the Italian crooner tradition. The musical rebirth of the 1950s and ?60s was like a second liberation. Putumayo?s Italian Café captures the music and attitude from that era and from current singers whose musical DNA follows that lineage. While most foreign music was banned under the Italian fascist regime, Fred Buscaglione wound up in a U.S. internment camp, where he was able to get a jumpstart in trying out the styles emerging from America. Quartetto Cetra emerged in the late ?40s, when they provided the overdubs for the Italian versions of the movies Dumbo and Wizard of Oz. The following decade found Renato Carosone blending Neapolitan folk music with American jazz and boogie-woogie to create a signature style that made him a household name in Italy and a chart-topping crooner in the U.S. Nicola Arigliano is the only 1950s-era artist on Italian Café performing to this day. Born in 1923 in a small village in southern Italy, Arigliano ran away from home when he was just 11 years old to play music in the nightclubs of Milan. Arigliano disappeared from the concert stage for 30 years. In the past decade he re-emerged with four new albums. Gianmaria Testa is more famous abroad than he is at home in Italy, where he works as a train station manager. You can hear his trademark gruff, whispering voice on two songs on Italian Café. Daniele Silvestri?s "Le Cose in Comune" won Italy?s equivalent of the Grammy, as best song of the year. The collection features extensive liner notes in English, Italian, Spanish and French.« less
After the chaos and destruction of World War II and the conservative musical environment Italian leaders promoted, the Italian public was ready for a more relaxed sound. Jazz, swing and boogie-woogie were achieving worldwide popularity and merged with the Italian crooner tradition. The musical rebirth of the 1950s and ?60s was like a second liberation. Putumayo?s Italian Café captures the music and attitude from that era and from current singers whose musical DNA follows that lineage. While most foreign music was banned under the Italian fascist regime, Fred Buscaglione wound up in a U.S. internment camp, where he was able to get a jumpstart in trying out the styles emerging from America. Quartetto Cetra emerged in the late ?40s, when they provided the overdubs for the Italian versions of the movies Dumbo and Wizard of Oz. The following decade found Renato Carosone blending Neapolitan folk music with American jazz and boogie-woogie to create a signature style that made him a household name in Italy and a chart-topping crooner in the U.S. Nicola Arigliano is the only 1950s-era artist on Italian Café performing to this day. Born in 1923 in a small village in southern Italy, Arigliano ran away from home when he was just 11 years old to play music in the nightclubs of Milan. Arigliano disappeared from the concert stage for 30 years. In the past decade he re-emerged with four new albums. Gianmaria Testa is more famous abroad than he is at home in Italy, where he works as a train station manager. You can hear his trademark gruff, whispering voice on two songs on Italian Café. Daniele Silvestri?s "Le Cose in Comune" won Italy?s equivalent of the Grammy, as best song of the year. The collection features extensive liner notes in English, Italian, Spanish and French.
Jeffrey H. from SIGNAL MTN, TN Reviewed on 12/23/2006...
CD is unopened and still in shrink wrap.
0 of 3 member(s) found this review helpful.
CD Reviews
Happy, Fun, Enjoy life Songs
Dawn Woolcott | Vancouver WA | 08/24/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I truly enjoy this cd. The songs are not the traditional songs you might think of listening to while cruising the Grand Canal in Venice in a gondola, but are songs that evoke images of Sophia Loren, Dean Martin, and the happy images of the late 50's. Most of the songs make you want to dance. They are a joy to listen to. They are not all old songs though - several are from current artists. Only track #3 seems out of place - but is not too annoying to make you want to avoid the cd altogether. Both my young children and I love listening to them all. Now to learn to speak Italian so I can sing along!"
Nostalgia
Stella Hostis | Boston | 06/05/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)
"I'm a music teacher and I speak Italian very well. I heard most of this CD while cleaning up after a Tuscan-themed Teacher Appreciation Lunch at my own son's school. I think this CD is a great find: contains a whole bunch of music I wasn't familiar with; witty lyrics, and a real authentic, not-overproduced feel. I really had not heard indigenous Italian jazz, and now I find that it's great stuff. I'm pretty picky--for instance, love Putamayo's Gypsy Caravan and Arabic Groove but detest Jewish Odyssey. So for what it's worth, that's my opinion."
Felice
H+E | Albuquerque, New Mexico United States | 07/18/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This collection is a lot of fun, spanning the ages from the 50's to modern pieces. My only criticism is that there are two singers who are represented twice on this cd. It's not that they aren't good songs, but weren't there other performers to represent?"
A great mood CD
Mike F. | Seattle, WA | 08/17/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"I find the Putamayo CDs hit-or-miss, but this one is definitely a hit. It's not corny but not challenging, either. A good choice when you're trying to create a certain mood."
Put this CD on, whip up an espresso, and pretend you're in I
Scott A. Humphries | Australia | 08/30/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"The Putumayo Presents series are an excellent introduction to various international musical genres and they seem to nail it each time. This CD is no exception. The musical choices may not be so exciting if you know very much (or even anything) about Italian contemporary music, but for those of us who don't you can put it on, drink your Chianti and eat your pasta and salad and imagine yourself in some little cafe in a backstreet in Rome. Or you can make yourself an espresso and stand up at your kitchen counter and pretend you're at an espresso bar. It's a nifty little mood setter."