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Patrizio Buanne - Italian [UK Bonus Tracks] (CD)

Italian [UK Bonus Tracks]
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Album Details: Italian [UK Bonus Tracks]

Release Date:01/01/2005
Label:Umvd Import
UPC:602498683903

Track List: Italian [UK Bonus Tracks]

  1. Mondo (My World)
  2. Amore Scusami (My Love, Forgive Me)
  3. That's Amore [*]
  4. Man Without Love
  5. Parla Pił Piano (Theme from The ...
  6. Che Sarą
  7. Come Prima (For the First Time)
  8. 'Italiano
  9. Home to Mamma
  1. Luna Mezz'o Mare
  2. Alta Marea
  3. Soli
  4. On an Evening in Roma
  5. Winter Wonderland [*]
  6. Credi in Te (Believe in Yourself)
  7. Na Sera e Maggio (An Evening in ...
  8. Man Without Love [English Version]
  9. Il Mondo [Italian Version][*]

Other Available Formats: Italian [UK Bonus Tracks]

Pro Reviews: Italian [UK Bonus Tracks]

  • All Music Guide

    Patrizio Buanne is veritably obsessed with the sound and style of the 1950s and '60s. As a child, he won an Elvis impersonation competition when he dressed as a young version of the King, and he grew up listening almost solely to Italian or Italianinspired music from that same time period. And now, with his debut album, The Italian, he is able to sing many of the songs he loves. Recorded in London with the Royal Philharmonic, The Italian often harks back to the sound of the original recordings, like in Jimmy Fontana's "Il Mondo," Engelbert Humperdinck's "A Man Without Love," or Mario Lanza's "Come Prima," and Buanne sounds good, his baritone blending well with the orchestra. However, Buanne runs into problems when he tries to modernize the classics. While "Parla Pił Piano," from The Godfather, starts out nicely, the addition of a dancelike drumbeat sounds corny and forced. Even worse is the cover of Fontana's "Che Sarą," which turns the song into an easy listening radio favorite, culmi...nating in a gospely choral extravaganza, with alternating phrases from the crooning Buanne, who transforms the lines of leaving one's prospectless town (but with the intention of returning) into overly dramatic lovesickness, and the choir, whose sharp interpretation of the normally fluid Italian syllables gives a threatening feel to the piece. The only truly successful of these adaptations is "L'Italiano," which adds a nicely moving piano line, an electric guitar, and a brass section to the already great song, and sounds new but not kitschy. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said of "Home to Mamma," which Buanne helped cowrite. It's a bizarre mix of "Funiculi, Funicula," Lou Bega's "Mambo No. 5," and the Italian male's devotion to his mother, and is more confusing than anything else. The same adjective can also be applied to the Italianlanguage version of Crowded House's "Don't Dream It's Over" (called "Alta Marea" here), or the closer, "Credi in Te," which is reminiscent of both Kermit the Frog's "Rainbow Connection" and Andrea Bocelli. Buanne has a fantastic voice, and his genuine love of the music is apparent, but he needs to stop trying to add so much to the songs, and just sing them how they were meant to be sung. [This edition contains bonus tracks.] - Marisa Brown, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Patrizio Buanne

Born in Naples but raised in Vienna, Patrizio Buanne spent much of his youth listening to ItalianAmerican singers like Mario Lanza, Dean Martin, Al Martino, Frank Sinatra, and Tony Bennett in his father's pizzeria, and soon fell in love with the music of the 1950s and '60s. He won local singing competitions at an early age and, at 17, performed for Pope John Paul II. In... Read more