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entry Sept 2005
Mario
Maglione
Mario
Maglione was born in Mergellina,
the small fishing
port one mile east of the main body of Naples. From the medieval poet
Jacopo
Sannazzaro (1458-1539) to more recent dialect poets such as Salvatore Di Giacomo
(1860-1934), Mergellina
has been immortalized in the verses and
songs of her poets and musicians. It is precisely here, among the local
fishermen
of Mergellina that Maglione feels at home. He has recorded original
compositions that give voice and life to the fisherman as an
archetype--a kind
of father figure risen to mythological status. Maglione's
musical roots can be traced to his adolescence
and the encouragement he received from the Capuchin friars of Naples,
who gave
him the chance to perform in the small monastery theater. Developing
into a
solid interpreter of the Neapolitan repertoire, he performed in Elvio
Porta's Masaniello (a musical based on the life
of that 17th-century Neapolitan revolutionary). Maglione
broke out
of national boundaries to perform recitals and gain recognition not
only in the
Europe of Great Britain, Germany, Switzerland, Hungary, and Holland,
but on a
worldwide stage as well, in Japan, Australia, and Canada. Maglione's CD's
include: Suonno,
Novecento Napoletano,
Scapricciando, Ricordi di Napoli, Napule Doceamare, and
Napule è na
Canzone, representing, together, a virtuoso
presentation of the classical Neapolitan song. He has appeared
on
television many times, notably on the Maurizio
Costanzo Show,
gaining the admiration of the host, Costanzo, one of Italy's best known
personalities and an undisputed connoisseur of Italian show business. Other notable appearances on Italian
television have included Domenica In,
Ciao
Week-End, Radio Anchio,
Fantastica
Età, 7 scenari per
il 2000, Buon Compleanno and
Tappeto
Volante. Roberto
Murolo, the foremost performer of the genre in the
20th century and absolutely the greatest scholar, ever, of the music,
clearly
regarded Maglione as his musical heir. In presenting one of Maglione's
CDs to
the public, Murolo cited the singer's extraordinarily original and
powerful
ability to communicate, supported by technical mastery and a powerful,
harmonious voice. Murolo was convinced that he had found in Maglione
one who
could carry the traditions of the classical Neapolitan Song into the
future.
That judgment by Murolo is the best that Maglione—as well as the rest
of
us—could have hoped for. to main
index
to portal for music
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