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the1920sand30s | Aldo Masseglia & Meme Bianchi - Cuore A Cuor [Heart to Heart] (1936) @the1920sand30s | Uploaded July 2021 | Updated October 2024, 6 hours ago.
Performed by: Aldo Masseglia & Meme Bianchi

Full Song Title: Cuore A Cuor

Recorded in: 1936

Some of you may recognize this iconic song, this is a cover and Aldo Masseglia's own interpretation of Fred Astaire's - Cheek to Cheek from the movie Top Hat (1935).

Aldo Masseglia (La Spezia, 5 October 1903 - Lodi, 2 September 1978) was a popular Italian singer of the 1930's.

He began his career in the early thirties as a violinist, playing in various orchestral formations, until he revealed good singing skills that allowed him to enter the EIAR in Turin in 1936, in the Barzizza orchestra.

Here he met and married the Milanese singer Nuccia Natali, from whom, in 1943, he had a daughter, Rosella Masseglia Natali, who was an appreciated pop singer in the sixties.

He also participated in the famous radio broadcasts The Four Musketeers, where he played the role of Athos, and The Phantom Microphone, both conceived by Nizza and Morbelli.

In 1938 he left the radio to devote himself to musical performances, giving way to Alberto Rabagliati.

His most significant interpretations are: Cuore A Cuor, Tu che ti chiami amor, Vele, Cinquant'anni fa, Gioventù, Lasciati andare, Villanella, Faccetta nera, Francescamaria, Me ne frego, Ritorna il legionario, Bandiere al sole e Ti saluto and e vado in Abissinia.

Meme Bianchi, born Magda Merope Bianchi (Porto Ceresio, April 26, 1907 - Milan, October 25, 2000), was a popular Italian singer of the 1930's.

She inherited the ability to sing from her mother, Ida Viale, an opera singer, and from her grandmother, Merope Bavestrelli Bianchi, also an opera singer. From her grandmother she also inherited her middle name, which as a child she could not pronounce, she used to pronounce Merope as Meme and from thereon Meme became her nickname.

She grew up in Porto Ceresio and obtained a primary school teacher diploma, but her father did not want her to take up the teaching profession, so as a young woman she began to work in her father's custom's office at the train station.

In the years between the word war one and world war two, some of her family members in Porto Ceresio had started a theater company and in the summer they performed stage plays in the newly built theater. At the end of the show, the audience asked Meme to sing and one evening in 1933, a talent scout for a record label, offered her to audition in Milan. Under the pretext of running some errands, Meme auditioned and got a record deal thanks to her great vocal range, her soft voice and her clear diction.

She recorded hundreds of records, many under the orchestral direction of Mario Mariotti, who would later become her husband. She becomes the first singer of EIAR, performing with the famous orchestras of Petralia and Barzizza. On the radio she played operettas such as Al Cavallino Bianco and The Four Musketeers, the famous broadcast show with Nunzio Filogamo linked to a prized competition.

She also made numerous recordings with the orchestra of Maestro Enzo Ceragioli for the Odeon label.

In 1936 she was with the group Schwarz. Singer/actress in the Bertoldissimo stage play. In Greece she inaugurated Radio Athens and in Switzerland Radio Monteceneri; she went on many tours throughout Italy and abroad with the group "I Divi del Microphone".

In 1939, at the church of Sant'Ambrogio in Porto Ceresio, she married maestro Mario Mariotti (1889-1975), composer, arranger and director of the Odeon record label, for whom she recorded at the time.

At the outbreak of the war she continued to perform in the theater and for soldiers she gave recitals accompanied by a single accordion, one of such performances was on the destroyer Grecale. As a thank you, the sailors lined up in a row in front of her and they gave her their rations of coffee.

In 1958 she retired to her hometown, resuming her job at her father's custom's office at the the train station.She passed away in Milan on 25 October 2000.

I hope you enjoy this as much as I have.

Best wishes,
Stu
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Please Note: I do not claim copyright or ownership of the song played in this video. All copyrighted content remains property of their respective owners.
Aldo Masseglia & Meme Bianchi - Cuore A Cuor [Heart to Heart] (1936)Rudy Wiedoeft - Valse Vanité [Vanity Waltz] (1925)Walter Kollo - Am schönsten ist´s bei Muttern! [Theres no place like mothers!] (1915)Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers - A Fine Romance (1936)The Mills Brothers with Louis Armstrong - The Old Folks At Home (1937)Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians - Babys Birthday Party (1930)John McCormack - The Garden Where the Praties Grow (1930)Emilio De Gogorza - La Golondrina [The Swallow] (1926)Aldo Visconti - Tornerai [You will return] (1937)Eric Helgar - In die unbekannte Ferne [Into the unknown distance] (1937)Eric Helgar - Dreaming Of The South Seas  [Träumen von der Südsee] (1937)Leo Reisman & His Orchestra - Stormy Weather (1933)

Aldo Masseglia & Meme Bianchi - Cuore A Cuor [Heart to Heart] (1936) @the1920sand30s

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