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The Alan Lomax Collection: Italian Treasury - Folk Music and Song of Italy

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Download links and information about The Alan Lomax Collection: Italian Treasury - Folk Music and Song of Italy by Alan Lomax. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Blues, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 22 tracks with total duration of 59:24 minutes.

Artist: Alan Lomax
Release date: 1999
Genre: Blues, World Music, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 22
Duration: 59:24
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Zumba Lariula (featuring Complesso Enalistico) 3:02
2. A la Sulfatara (featuring Giuseppe Infuso & Mauro Croce) 1:49
3. A Lina Lina and Urallira (featuring Giovanni Canduci, Ononfrio Lopresti) 3:50
4. Balletto (featuring Unidentified Women) 1:39
5. Tarantella (featuring Domenica Arlotta & Giuseppe Buieti) 3:30
6. Alla Campagnola (featuring Antonia Pingitore, Maria Pingitore, Angelina Falvo) 1:45
7. Serenata (featuring Unidentified Performers) 2:10
8. La Strina (featuring Unidentified Performers) 2:48
9. Ueje-Eli (featuring Unidentified Woman) 1:16
10. Stornelli (featuring Unidentified Men) 3:10
11. Ninna Nanna (featuring Unidentified) 1:12
12. Olive Pressing Song (featuring Unidentified Male Chorus) 1:46
13. Tammurriata (featuring Giacomo De Riso & Maddalena Farina) 4:14
14. Alla Fiera di Lanciano (featuring Coro Di Caldari) 3:03
15. Saltarello (featuring Alfredo) 3:44
16. Stornelli 5:01
17. Lipa Ma Marica (featuring Giovanni Di Lenardo) 2:44
18. Villanella (featuring Alberico Zanacchi & Giuseppe Forsatti) 2:19
19. Donna, Donna (featuring The Band) 2:20
20. Trallalero (featuring Male Voices) 3:08
21. Su Tenore a Ballu (featuring Male Voices) 1:42
22. Ballo Tondo (featuring Unidentified Flute & Guitar Players) 3:12

Details

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Alan Lomax, the man who apparently never slept in the 1950s in his quest to document various forms of international folk music throughout the world, made Italy his stop in the spring of 1953. For the next year he journeyed throughout the country with Diego Carpitella, recording in Sicily, Calabria, Sardinia, and several other regions. Italy is a large country with diverse folk musics, and it's impossible to generalize, even in a sweeping manner, about the nature of the sounds documented on this disc — which was, of course, one of the points of Lomax's expeditions. There are stark vocals with only Jew's harp as accompaniment, sea shanties, male choruses, accordion music, spooky dances with frame drum and mobile hammers as percussion, guitar ballads, brass bands, and more. For some it will be too eclectic and arcane for casual listening, but it's certainly interesting and doles out the unexpected. Among the most affecting performances are the five-minute guitar ballad "Stornelli" by Calamita & Gucci, which doesn't sound far removed from Mexican guitar folk or Portuguese fado in its sad elegance; "Tammurriata," with its thumping frame drum and odd female chanted-sung vocals; and a couple of male choral pieces in which the bass voices buzz in a way reminiscent of Tuvan throat singers.