Additional information
| Artist(s) | |
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| Composer(s) | Alfredo Mazzucchi, Antonello Paliotti, Eduardo Di Capua, Francesco Paolo Tosti, Manuel De Falla, Mario Costa |
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| Publication year |
Physical Release: 24 April 2025
Digital Release: 15 May 2025
| Artist(s) | |
|---|---|
| Composer(s) | Alfredo Mazzucchi, Antonello Paliotti, Eduardo Di Capua, Francesco Paolo Tosti, Manuel De Falla, Mario Costa |
| EAN Code | |
| Edition | |
| Format | |
| Genre | |
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Parallel songs is more than a mere metaphor.
“Vite parallele” is the title of a Plutarco’s famous work, composed by 23 couples of biographies, each of them narrating the life of a Greek man and of a Roman one known by him: an open comparison between the two dominant cultures of his time.
Also our lives are parallel, they have followed distant artistic runs, but all of a sudden they have betted on a meeting.
Parallel the cultures we intend to compare by using the Neapolitan song as “adhesive” of various European traditions.
The Neapolitan song is universally recognized as one of the most significant experiences of the Italian vocal chamber music, for centuries.
During the whole nineteenth and twentieth century we assist at its extraordinary international spread thanks above all to the new economic logics, that also saw the publishers themselves protagonists of the bourgeois musical world.
The irrepressible need, on our behalf, to explore the repertoire of the so-called “classical” tradition, favours the approach with repertoires apparently distant but secretly similar.
It becomes natural to start our project just from Spanish music, because of a mutual cultural affinity, whose reasons, in the case of the Neapolitan tradition, stay in its historical events.
The more evident common denominator of such an approach is the symmetrical search and use of the popular music repertoire.
Many researchers have been worried about establishing differences between the popular song, anonymous creation, result of several individual realizations continuously increasing, and the folksy song, work, on the contrary, of a certain individual who becomes the interpreter of collective feelings.
Maybe in this context such a definite distinction may appear pernicious since every cultural demonstration crosses roads that escape to the rigidity of definitions.
But how to introduce the Neapolitan song so much used and at times abused?
A fecond solution comes from the meeting with a cultured and passionate musician Antonello Paliotti, who has rewritten pieces of the great repertoire, eager to find a possible compromise between the popular language and the writing of the contemporary music.
Here is a synthesis of Paliotti himself.
The Neapolitan song, in the period going from the end of the ninenteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century, is essentially a product destined to a raising market, and above all to a Piedigrotta that has definitively lost its mytical-religious function. In this sense it is possible to recognize – above all in the Di Giacomo’s production – one of the last attempts to connect such product with the European “liederistica” maintaining at the same time strong bonds with a popular tradition still rather living at that time.
Today it is possible to approach that production both in an analytical way, departing from written documents and operating an elaboration, or a rewriting, that concerns the harmonic and rhythmic tissue, both departing from the oral tradition and from recording documents, working on the interpretation of the piece or better on the history of its interpretations.
We have chosen, first of all, to underline the “cultured” traces found in the original scores, often by referring to a protoimpressionistic writing, without neglecting the history, the overlappings, the conventions arrived through an interpretative tradition that we cannot ignore.
The history of the Neapolitan song, represented in this program by authentic masterpieces, is studded with an impressive corollary of anecdotes.
You can penetrate the single biographies of musicians such as Eduardo Di Capua or Mario Costa, who contributed, through a personal cosmopolitanism, to raise the quality of the Neapolitan song that had acquired ample space in the bourgeois salons, up to the famous Tosti, (who was from Abbruzzo but studied in S.Pietro a Majella) one of the most shining example of musician, organizer, teacher of the children of the English royal family (Queen Victoria gave him the prestigious title of “Sir”) with a European personality.
Equally, showed themselves unquiet poets of very high stature such as Giovanni Capurro (author of the “Carduccianelle”, composition in which he attempts a courageous experimentation of the barbaric metrics applied to the Neapolitan dialect, operation very appreciated by Carducci himself) or Salvatore Di Giacomo who, according to Croce, dignified, or better “invented” the literary Neapolitan dialect. An affirmation which caused an open polemic with the other great poet Ferdinando Russo, who will accuse Croce and Di Giacomo of removing the Neapolitan dialect from its popular roots.
Proof of the vivacity of a people that has always made of music and above all of vocality and theatre its expression.
After all Naples, according to a legend, has been founded by a siren: Partenope, who sings and…enchants!
And it is out of question that the Neapolitan culture has absorbed, during the centuries, the most varied solicitations from the musical languages, interacting as a sponge that absorbs but at the same time releases absolutely peculiar expressive codes, both from an harmonic point of view and from a melodic one.
For this reason it is plausible to talk about a “Neapolitan style”, as Charles Burney does in its Viaggio in Italia and it is this after all, the leading idea of the Disordinata storia della canzone napoletana by Roberto De Simone.
A brief excursus on the Spanish tradition is parallelly proposed.
Only a few know that the poet and playwright Federico Garcia Lorca (Granada 1898-1936) was also a fine musician. He played with a sure mastery both the guitar and the piano and he had a certain familiarity with the harmony.
Despite the fact that his parents had addressed him to literature, that constituted his principal world, he never left out music, addressing his search towards the popular songs of his country.
Like a careful ethnomusicologist, Lorca used to go in the country to draw liberally on a precious material, he knew how to reproduce personally accompanying himself.
They are harmonizations that he transcribed as simple traces in order to give a certain space to the imponderability of improvisation.
For the fans we can remember an historical recording of Federico Garcia Lorca going back to 1931, for the record company “La Voz de su Amo”. Lorca accompanies on the piano the famous singer and dancer Encarnacion Lopez Julvez, called the “Argentinita” who in her turn articulates the rhythm with the castagnets. A recording that had at that time an extraordinary success: the pieces then published such as “Anda jaleo” or “Los quatros Muleros” represented the allusive incitement to the struggle against the militias of the general Franco.
Also Manuel De Falla (Cadice-Cordoba 1876 Argentina 1946) shares with Lorca, of whom he was intimate friend, the passion for the folkloristic search. The result of his ethnomusicological researches is “Siete canciones populares espanolas”. But Falla, extremely refined composer, does not limit himself to a trace as accompaniment, because he elaborates a very personal harmonic and instrumental vision. A run that starts from “El pano moruno”, that is absolutely faithful to the popular dictation while respecting the original melody. Asturiana has an harmonic elaboration that completely transfigures the song; the “Seguidilla Murciana” and the “Nana” (original Andalusian song) perfectly folkloristic, the “Jota” and “Polo” original by Falla.
Giovanni Auletta © 2025
Giovanni Auletta was born in Naples and graduated with honors from the S. Pietro a Majella Conservatory under the guidance of Sergio Fiorentino. Subsequently he graduated under the guidance of Sergio Perticaroli with full marks and honors at the Accademia di S. Cecilia in Rome. He graduated with honors in Musicology at the School of Musical Paleography of Cremona of the University of Pavia.
Winner of some piano competitions ("Schumann" of Macugnaga, "Schubert" of Dortmund, Germany, "City of Senigallia"), he has been a guest of important Festivals in the major Italian institutions (in the seasons of the Accademia S. Cecilia and Teatro Dell'Opera in Rome, for the Associazione Associazione Scarlatti, Associazione Internazionale Chopin in Naples, for the Società dei Concerti, the Sala Fazioli and the Bocconi University in Milan, for the Estate Musicale Sorrentina and the Società di Concerti in Ravello, for the Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa, etc.) and abroad, in the main halls of cities such as Vienna, Paris, Amsterdam, Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Dortmund, Berlin, Tokyo, New York, Miami, Panama City, Buenos Aires etc.. dedicating himself to both the solo and chamber repertoire.
He was hired by the Mozart Gesellschaft Salzburg for a series of concerts with the Berlin Symphony Orchestra, and then he was invited for a tour with the NovoSibirsk and St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra.
He recorded for Emi Classics a double CD of works by F.P. Tosti which received a special prize from the critics and from the Istituto Tostiano of Ortona.
He is taking care, as reviewer, of the publication of the manuscripts of Wilhelm Kempff's music for the Da Vinci publishing house - with already three volumes to his credit - thanks to the availability of the Akademie der Künste of Berlin which holds the entire legacy and of this author has recorded the complete chamber music for the Brilliant Classics label.
For the same label in 2022 he recorded, together with Ginevra Petrucci, the entire works of Beethoven for flute and piano in three cds.
Intensely interested in the world of theater and vocality, he has collaborated actively as a pianist and concertatore in productions with artists such as Vanessa Redgrave and Carla Fracci at the Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa, the Teatro Greco in Syracuse and the Teatro Politeama in Naples.
He is a professor at the Conservatorio di Santa Cecilia in Rome and is regularly invited for masterclasses and seminars in prestigious Universities such as: Escuela di Canto di Madrid, Conservatorio Superior de Madrid, Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst Wien, Taiyuan University in the province of Shanxi in China.
Giuseppe Auletta was born in Naples and made his debut as a theater actor at a very young age. A varied and articulated path leads him to deepen his work on the stage also as a singer.
He was engaged by Antonio Fava for the comedy La Cortigiana Innamorata, with music by Orlando di Lasso, at the Ancient Music Festival of Urbino. Then he works in the Callas Masterclass alongside Rossella Falk, in a successful tour that touches, among others, the Manzoni theater in Milan, the Eliseo in Rome, the Comunale in Bologna, the Grace Kelly in Montecarlo, the Pergola in Florence, the Diana theater in Napoles, the Goldoni theater in Venice.
He made his debut at the Rome Opera as a solo singer in Butterfly and Parrots, alongside Carla Fracci, Mariano Rigillo, Massimo Ghini.
Also at the Rome Opera he is the protagonist as tenor soloist in the ballet "Pulcinella" by Stravinsky. Particularly interested in the relationship between music and speech, he specialized in the knowledge of the vocal and popular repertoire of European tradition with particular attention to that of his own origins. He dedicates himself to the rediscovery of unknown repertoires, which he combines in numerous projects with the classic Neapolitan song.
Giuseppe Auletta actively participates in a project entitled Canti Paralleli together with the composer Antonello Paliotti on the rewriting of the classical repertoire of the Neapolitan song. The aim is to use this repertoire in comparison with other vocal chamber music repertoires of European popular origin.
He graduated with honors in Singing and Vocal Chamber Music at the Briccialdi Conservatory of Music in Terni. In addition to carrying out an intense concert activity, he is a tenor in the Chorus of the Teatro dell'Opera in Rome.
Alfredo Mazzucchi (1878–1972) was an Italian composer and musician, known for being the co-author of some famous pieces of the Canzone Napoletana (Neapolitan songs) such as "'O sole mio", "Maria Marì", and "I' te vurria vasà".
Eduardo di Capua (May 12, 1865 – October 3, 1917) was an Italian composer, singer and songwriter.
Francesco Paolo Tosti: (b Ortano sul Mare, 9 April 1846; d Rome, 2 Dec 1916). Italian song composer and singing teacher. He entered the Naples Conservatory in 1858, studying the violin under Pinto and composition under Conti and Mercadante. In 1869, illness and overwork as maestrino at the college enforced a period of convalescence in Ortano. There he wrote Non m’ama più and Lamento d’amore, songs which subsequently became popular but which he initially found difficult to publish. Sgambati helped Tosti establish himself in Rome (where his admirers included D’Annunzio) by composing a ballad for a concert at the Sala Dante which Tosti himself sang in addition to his own works. Princess Margherita of Savoy (later Queen of Italy) was present and immediately appointed him her singing teacher and shortly thereafter curator of the court music archives. Tosti first visited London in 1875, and then made annual spring visits until he settled there in 1880. In the same year he was appointed singing teacher to the royal family, and from 1894 he was professor of singing at the RAM. He became a British subject in 1906, was knighted in 1908, and retired to Italy in 1912.
The songs Forever, Goodbye, Mother, At Vespers, Amore, Aprile, Vorrei morire and That Day were among his earliest successes in England. He was a prolific composer to Italian, French and English texts, with a graceful, fluent melodic style that quickly found favour among singers of drawing-room songs and ballads; the ballad ‘alla Tosti’ also found many imitators. His Vocal Albums, the 15 duets Canti popolari abruzzesi, and later songs such as Mattinata and Serenata all enjoyed great success.
Falla Manuel De: (b Cádiz, 23 Nov 1876; d Alta Gracia, Argentina, 14 Nov 1946). Spanish composer. The central figure of 20th-century Spanish music, he addressed over the course of his career many of the salient concerns of modernist aesthetics (nationalism, neo-classicism, the role of tonality, parody and allusion) from a unique perspective. Like many Spaniards, he was attracted to French culture. His predilection for the French music of his time, especially that of Debussy, caused him to be misunderstood in his own country, where conservative-minded critics attacked his music for its over-susceptibility to foreign influences. Reaction to Falla’s music by his compatriots often mirrored the convulsive political changes the country underwent before and during the Spanish Civil War (1936–9), a period of intense cultural activity whose musical manifestations nonetheless remain relatively unexplored.
Mario Costa (24 July 1858 –27 September 1933) was a prolific Italian composer primarily known for his art songs, Neapolitan songs, and operettas. Costa was born in Taranto to Angelo and Maria Giuseppa née Malagisi.
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Physical Release: 27 February 2026 Digital Release: 6 March 2026