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Roberto Murolo (1912-2003); Neapolitan Song (3)
There are three main reasons why one–thousand miles of Italians—from the Alps to Sicily—know something about the culture and language of Naples. The first reason is the great playwright Eduardo de Filippo, on many a literary critic's "short list" of Those Who Should Have Got a Nobel Prize But Didn't." The second reason—on a more popular (and more vital) level—is Italy's greatest film comic, Antonio de Curtis, known simply as "Totò". The third reason is Roberto Murolo, the gentle and erudite chronicler of Neapolitan music and the best–known singer in the twentieth century of the "Neapolitan Song." If Murolo had simply been content to remain a guitarist
and singer, he certainly would have done very well, but
he was born to more than that. His father was the
highly–regarded dialect poet Ernesto Murolo, part of the
long tradition of dialect
literature that included his own contemporary, Salvatore di Giacomo, and
reached back through the 18th–century libretti of the Neapolitan Comic Opera to the
16th–century Pentamarone
by Giambattista Basile, and
beyond. Thus, Roberto Murolo was very aware of being
part of that tradition, and his great contribution to
the music of Naples is a scholarly one. He dedicated
years of his life to researching, collecting and
documenting Neapolitan music and in 1963 published what
amounted to a musical encyclopedia of the music of
Naples, a 12 LP set containing songs from 1200 to 1962,
all carefully documented and explained and all
immaculately sung by Murolo, himself. He sang in the
precise pronunciation of a literary language, quite
different from the uneducated "street sound" that one
often associates with the term "dialect".
Although he became less active with advanced age,
Murolo never really retired. He took part in the 1993
version of the annual Festival of Italian Popular Music
in San Remo with a song entitled "L'Italia è
bella," a song against racism and xenophobia. And
while "cross cultural" music is run of the mill today,
Murolo was doing that as long ago as 1974, when he
sought out and sang with the great Portughese performer
of Fado, Amalia Rodriguez. Murolo was an inspiration to
the "friendly rivals" of his own generation such as Sergio Bruni and to the younger
generation of singers such as Massimo Ranieri and Pino Daniele, both of whom
published tributes to Murolo in the paper this morning.
As with the passing of Eduardo de Filippo in 1984 and
Totò in 1967, there is a very real sense of loss
in Naples today. |