|
RELEASE YEAR |
0000 |
SUPPORT |
CD |
LABEL |
Via Asiago, 10 |
VOLUME |
1 |
CATALOGUE Nr.. |
TWI CD AS 09 48 |
DOWNLOAD |
€ 11,00 |
BARCODE |
8032732535569 |
PURCHASE |
€ 14,00 |
“Sprinkle my ashes on the moon”. This was Michael Jackson’s wish. An understandable wish for the creator
of the “moonwalk”.The first moon landing’s 40th anniversary has not gone unnoticed: exhibitions, conferences, memorialday,
radio and TV programmes, books, every sector of mass-media has remembered the event in its
own way. There have also been those who have involved the whole of 1969 in the recurrence, in other
words the Woodstock period and other unforgettable moments of music and events. An added reason
for closing and remembering metaphorically the prodigious seventies, such a fundamental part of youth
culture. Radio too could not miss out on this appointment, seeing how music filled the astronauts’ days
with sound inside their capsule.In putting together the compilation we have begun with some important lunar themes, both Italian and
not, keeping in mind those cases in which that somewhat jagged soil has brought luck. Starting with
Jenny Luna, the screamer who grew up in the shadow of Mina, but who was actually, before that, an
excellent jazz singer. And then the Roman, the pet and the voice of the Roman New Orleans Jazz Band,
Maria Clotilde Tosti who seemed to make little artistic headway with both her real name and her invented
name, Tilde Natil. She was to definitely become Luna/Moon in 1957 in Lebanon, when she sang with
the orchestra of her husband, Romano Frigeri, who had been the sax’ player for the Orchestra Angelini.
Memorable is her live version of Tintarella di Luna (Moon Tan), in the 1961 programme “Vecchio e nuovo
(Old and New)”. From the same programme come Blue moon by the Quartetto Cetra, Plenilunio (Full
Moon) by Nicola Arigliano and Luna caprese (Capri Moon) by Peppino Di Capri, three different moments
of pure lunar exaltation but also classics destined to remain in the repertoires of these great voices. From
the 1961 programme “Musica Club” comes Quando la Luna (When the Moon), a theme by Alberto Testa
put at the disposal of Corrado Lojacono, a definitely underrated singer, who knew how to interpret swing
but, when the need arose, was also a good crooner. The same can be said for the better known Natalino
Otto – who sang and recorded at least a dozen American classics with “moon” in the title – when in 1958
he tackled Che Luna, che mare (What a Moon, What a Sea), a piece that, the decidedly obvious title
aside, is not so obvious from a musical point of view, thanks also to Franco Mojoli’s orchestra. And, on
the subject of orchestras, here is the glitter – and the swing! – of the two led by Gorni Kramer and Lelio
Luttazzi, the first already a radio star, and the man from Trieste coming to grips with his early experiences
as a director and absolutely earliest (“exhausting”, to use his words) musical arrangements. It was by
then 1954, and their radio orchestras already had the best solo jazz musicians in Italy, fully expressed in
the famous programme “Nati per la musica/Born for Music”: here are their versions of Un po’ di Luna (A
little Bit of Moon) and the medley “Blue moon (Moonlight serenade)”. Quante lune (How many Moons)
instead dates back to 1957, and is the piece in which Kramer, in this case also the author, showed both
technique and inspiration with the instrument with which he excelled, the accordion (but his first instrument
was the double bass).
Whilst on the subject of jazz, here is a real gem: Johnny Desmond tackling “‘Na voce ‘na chitarra e ‘o
poco ‘e Luna (A Voice a Guitar and a Touch of Moonlight), one of the best known Neapolitan songs of
the fifties, by Ugo Calise and Carlo Alberto Rossi (here with the English text by Al Stillman). Amongst this
song’s many records is that of being the one most played before kings, queens, rulers, sheiks, sultans and crowned heads in general. With a theme of this type we could not but pay homage to the Sanremo
Festival, which we do with a special version of the runner up at the first edition of this event in 1951, La
Luna si veste d’argento (The Moon Clothes Itself in Silver), a piece that Achille Togliani sang at the Salone
delle Feste (Sanremo Festival Hall) together with the many times winner Nilla Pizzi (but here she is substituted
by Carla Boni). Instead, Luna sanremese/Sanremo Moon has nothing to do with the festival, as
it was part of the musical comedy “Carlo non farlo” (Charles don’t do it), written by Garinei and
Giovannini (with music by Gorni Kramer) for Carlo Dapporto and Lauretta Masiero. A piece from 1956 a
part of the ample satire on the then recently celebrated wedding between Ranieri of Monaco and Grace
Kelly. Yet Renato Rascel’s version is certainly superior to the version by that Sanremo born artist that was
Dapporto. The Sanremo Festival takes us straight to Claudio Villa, in our disk with Non aspettar la Luna
(Don’t Wait for the Moon), a piece from 1958, in which the Roman singer is accompanied by the orchestra
of the pianist and composer from Sora, Ovidio Sarra, for many years his faithful musical right-hand
man. Dark moon is here proposed in a very night-style version by Franco e i G5, one of the most popular
dance bands of the fifties, with its leader, the Florentine Franco Rosselli, who was the singer and
played the drums.
To this extraordinary list of singers and musicians one must add the equally robust list of journalists that
reported on the moon landing, among them Danilo Colombo, Luca Liguori, Aldo Salvo, Francesco
Mattioli and a dynamic Enrico Ameri, that would here seem to be intentioned not to ‘excuse’ anyone in
his highly emotive radio report conducted like a counterattack. But before them there are the voices of
the three astronauts: Neil Armstrong, Edwin Aldrin and Michael Collins, and even the one of the crew’s
doctor, Charles Berry. The words Armstrong spoke when he set foot upon the moon are consigned to
history and for once even Richard Nixon’s words seem sincere when he congratulates Armstrong in
moved tones. And then the intellectuals and travellers: Oriana Fallaci and Alberto Moravia, dry that bit
that’s needed in their reports. Informative instead was the astronomer Ginestra Amaldi. Lyrical but not
too melancholic was the vision of Alfonso Gatto, another person used to being on personal name terms
with the Moon, who here remembers he’s a poet but also a great jazz lover. |