Salvatore Cardillo

Cardillo's richly scored and still popular 1911 romance ''Core 'ngrato'' (''Ungrateful Heart'') — also known by its lyric ''Catarì, Catarì, pecchè me dici sti parole amare'' — was written in America to a text in Neapolitan by Alessandro Sisca (Riccardo Cordiferro); it is in fact the only famous Neapolitan song by an Italian-American immigrant. The song's first exponent was the operatic tenor Enrico Caruso, but it is not clear whether he commissioned it. Franco Corelli, Luciano Pavarotti, Giuseppe di Stefano, José Carreras and, more recently, Roberto Alagna and Jonas Kaufmann are among the tenors to have included ''Core 'ngrato'' in their repertories.
The composer also wrote the songs ''Barcarola'', to a text by Edoardo San Giovanni, and ''Oi luna'' (''O Silvery Moon''), to a text by Riccardo Cordiferro. These were published in 1921 as "Two Neapolitan Songs" by G. Schirmer Inc. in New York. Provided by Wikipedia
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3by Buzzi-Peccia, Arturo, 1854-1943, De Curtis, Ernesto, 1875-1937, Giménez, Jerónimo, 1854-1923, Lara, Augustín, 1900-1970, Di Capua, Eduardo, 1864-1917, Dusík, Gejza, 1907-1988, Bizet, Georges, 1838-1875, Verdi, Giuseppe, 1813-1901, Massenet, Jules, 1842-1912, Puccini, Giacomo, 1858-1924, Cardillo, Salvatore, 1874-1947
Published 1994Audio