Carlo Buti – Non Ti Scordar Di Me – The First Italian Superstar in the 20th Century
Carlo Buti – Non Ti Scordar Di Me
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Carlo Buti (14 November 1902 – 16 November 1963) was an Italian interpreter of popular and folk music. He was known as “the Golden Voice of Italy”, and was possibly the first superstar of Italian music in the twentieth century. He recorded 1574 songs during his career.
Buti was born in Florence, Italy. As a boy, he mastered the Tuscan folk song technique known as stornello. He was soon being paid by other men to serenade their girlfriends. He received limited vocal training from Raoul Frazzi and Gino Bechi. He was featured on Italian radio. His first recording contract (1930) was with Edison-Bell Records. In 1934 he signed with Columbia Records.
Buti has been called the Bing Crosby and the “Frank Sinatra of Italy”, because of his preference for the popular songs of the day over the more operatic-type songs.
He retired in 1956 after having recorded 1574 songs. At the time, his was the most-recorded voice in Italian music history. His unique warm and melodic “tenorino” style of high quasi-falsetto phrasing sung in the “mezza voce” made him an international success. He also starred in several Italian movies. He died at his home in Montelupo Fiorentino, in Tuscany, Italy, at the age of 61.
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