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( View LP Cover
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The Great Italian - American Songs
SIDE 1
THAT'S AMORE
SIXTEEN TONS
SORRENTO
VOLARE
ABBRACCIAMI
I'M WALKIN' |
SIDE 2
A GOOD MAN IS HARD TO FIND
CHITARRA ROMANA
O SOLE MIO
LUNA, LUNA, LUNA LU
VIA VENETO
COMM'E BELLE A STAGIONE |
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The Great
Italian - American Songs |
[ BACK
] |
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THAT'S
AMORE |
|
SIXTEEN
TONS |
|
SORRENTO |
|
VOLARE |
|
ABBRACCIAMI |
|
I'M WALKIN' |
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A GOOD MAN
IS HARD TO FIND |
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CHITARRA
ROMANA |
|
O SOLE MIO |
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LUNA, LUNA,
LUNA LU |
|
VIA VENETO |
|
COMM'E
BELLE A STAGIONE |
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The most cursory glance down
the roster of America's most popular troubadours immediately reveals one
prime and inescapable fact — the majority are of Italian-American
extraction. Sinatra . . . Como . . . Damone . Martin . . . Darin . . .
Bennett . . . La Rosa . . . the list seems endless.
Of this goodly company, however, only one bears the title, King of
Italian-American Singers — that's Lou Monte.
As evidenced by his many record hits — Darktown Strutters' Ball, Italian
Hucklebuck, Lazy Mary, Sheik of Araby and numerous others — Lou Monte's
performances are notable as much for bubbling, unrestrained enthusiasm
and infectious humor as for the high degree of musicality in his
singing. And always there is the unexpected : the fresh twist to
familiar material that has served to endear the singer to a
multitudinous audience, to maintain his position as one of the nation's
top night club entertainers and to keep his recordings hot on the
best-selling lists.
In his first album for Reprise, the irrepressible Mr. Monte lends his
certain touch to some material already familiar in different garb. Who
but Monte, for example, would dare take off on the wild Italian version
of Fats Domino's rock and roll classic, I'm W alkin' ; or have the
temerity to invest that anthem of the red,hot marhas, A Good Man Is Hard
To Find, with the torrid spirit of a Mediterranean piazza party? Or take
his version of That's Amore; he wallops the song home in a fashion that
can only be described as a cross between rock and roll and swing. Then,
of course, there's the tale of woe about the hard-working stiff who
"owes his soul to the company store," Sixteen Tons. In Italian? Only
Monte could bring it off.
There is a straight side to Lou Monte also. He reveals it in his
rendition of the romantic Italian favorite, Comm'e Bella Stagione (When
I Hold You In My Arms), in the ballad Abbracciami or the ode to Italia's
Fifth Avenue, Via Veneto. Chitarra Romana (Roman Guitars) is done
bi-lingually, in both Italian and English, while Sorrento and 0 Sole Mio
are Mediterranean to the core, redolent with the scent of olive groves.
Luna, Luna, Luna Lu is a reprise of a song that
became a great success in England, and Volare, of course, is Italian and
swinging all the way.
Throughout, the imaginative orchestrations of Joe Reisman, highlighting
the voicing of accordions and mandolins to achieve a sound that is
different, yet in character with the singer, construct a perfect
framework for each performance.
DISTRIBUTED BY PYE RECORDS 566 ELIZABETH STREET, MELBOURNE |
Lou Monte |
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