Al Martino - That Much of Your Love (2017)

  • 10 Jun, 07:40
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Artist:
Title: That Much of Your Love
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: nagel heyer records
Genre: Jazz, Swing, Pop, Easy Listening
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:15:58
Total Size: 436 / 177 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Now
02. Nessun Dorma
03. Are You Lonesome Tonight
04. Granada
05. Because You're Mine
06. You Can't Go on Forever Breaking My Heart
07. Sweetheart of Mine
08. I've Got You Under My Skin
09. Make Me Believe
10. Dicitencello Vuie
11. Have I Told You Lately
12. Wanted
13. Close to You
14. Love Where Are You Now
15. Take My Heart
16. I Love You Because
17. Makin' Whoopee
18. The Man from Laramie
19. Non Ti Scordar di Me
20. The Exodus Song
21. Rachel
22. No More
23. The Loveliest Night of the Year
24. Here in My Heart
25. The Story of Tina
26. Mattinata

Al Martino was one of the great Italian-American pop crooners, boasting a string of hit singles and LPs that stretched from the early '50s all the way into the mid-'70s. However, he is perhaps even better known for his role in The Godfather as singer Johnny Fontane, a character supposedly based on Frank Sinatra but with eerie similarities to Martino's own career. Martino's 1952 debut smash, "Here in My Heart," made him the first American artist to top the charts in Great Britain, but his career was interrupted by gangster interference, which kept him out of the U.S. for much of the '50s. He later returned and rejuvenated his career, scoring his signature hit with 1965's classic "Spanish Eyes" and reaching a whole new audience via The Godfather in 1972.

Martino was born Alfred Cini in Philadelphia on October 7, 1927. His Italian immigrant parents ran a masonry business, and he worked alongside his brothers as a bricklayer while growing up. However, he was more interested in music, and was inspired by Al Jolson and Perry Como to try his own hand at singing. When his boyhood friend Alfredo Cocozza changed his name to Mario Lanza and became an international opera star, the possibility of a career in music suddenly seemed plausible. Adopting the stage name Al Martino (after his maternal grandfather's last name), he performed in local nightclubs for a time, and moved to New York City in 1948 with Lanza's encouragement. He went on to win first place on the Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts show, thanks to a rendition of Perry Como's "If." That exposure helped him land a record deal with the Philadelphia-based independent label BBS.



  • mufty77
  •  22:58
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Many thanks for lossless.