Bruno Martino: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
m Copying from Category:Italian jazz pianists to Category:Male pianists using Cat-a-lot |
||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
[[Category:1925 births]] |
[[Category:1925 births]] |
||
[[Category:Italian jazz pianists]] |
[[Category:Italian jazz pianists]] |
||
[[Category:Male pianists]] |
|||
[[Category:20th-century Italian singers]] |
[[Category:20th-century Italian singers]] |
||
[[Category:20th-century pianists]] |
[[Category:20th-century pianists]] |
Revision as of 22:56, 8 November 2018
Bruno Martino | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Bruno Martino |
Born | Rome, Italy | 11 November 1925
Died | 12 June 2000 (aged 75) Rome, Italy |
Genres | Jazz, pop |
Occupation(s) | composer, pianist, singer |
Instrument(s) | Piano, Voice |
Years active | 1944–2000 |
Bruno Martino (11 November 1925 – 12 June 2000) was an Italian jazz composer, singer and pianist.
Martino's early working life was spent in European radio and night club orchestras, later composing for popular Italian singers and touring the world with his own orchestra. He had a late-blossoming career as a singer.[1]
Estate
Internationally he is best known for the song Estate, composed in 1960, a standard that has been performed by many jazz musicians and singers since the early 1960s, including João Gilberto, Joe Diorio, Chet Baker, Toots Thielemans, Shirley Horn, Eliane Elias, Michel Petrucciani, Monty Alexander, Mike Stern and Robert Jospé.
Dracula Cha Cha Cha
Bruno Martino's song "Dracula Cha Cha Cha" appears in the album Italian Graffiti (1960/61) and is performed onscreen in Vincente Minnelli's film Two Weeks in Another Town (1962).
It inspired the title of Kim Newman's novel Dracula Cha Cha Cha (1998), which takes place in Rome, 1959.
References
- ^ Michael Sattler. Bruno Martino. michaelsattler.com