ITEM

Canzoni d'Africa - Parte II (Coro dei volontari - Macallè - Canzone azzura) Item Info

Canzoni d'Africa - Parte II (Coro dei volontari - Macallè - Canzone azzura) - item

Object ID:
demo_1206
Creator:
Odeon
Type of Sound:
Music
Instruments:
Accordion
Type of Music:
Song
Date:
1936
Identifier:
12526 GO
Linked Recording:
demo_1205
Rights:
metadata-only record, please check the publication for rights
Source:
Corriere Musicale Rassegna Fonografica, March 25 - April 25, 1936
Description:
This recording is part of a vast propaganda repertoire of popular songs designed to accompany the political preparation and conduct of the Second Italo-Ethiopian Conflict, followed by the victory of Fascist troops and the founding of the Italian Empire in East Africa. These songs evoke this colonial war and its finality, using a wide range of modes and themes. In addition to the war and the Fascist martyrs, many of these songs assert the legitimacy of Italian colonization of Ethiopia, and more broadly of East Africa, presenting it in particular as a liberating and civilizing mission carried out among indigenous populations who were allegedly enslaved by the Emperor of Ethiopia, the Negus Haile Selassie. Throughout this repertoire, colonized populations are the subject of racist representations. When they evoke the "African woman", these racist representations also become sexual (see Gianpaolo Chiriacò, "Afrovocality – Ethiopia in 1930 Italian Popular Music", https://afrovocality.com/eirpop/ethiopia-in-1930-italian-popular-music/, accessed on February 12, 2025).
Online Resources:
-
Performers:
Gallo Gorni Kramer
Instruments:
Accordion
Genre:
Song
Sound Type:
Music
Related Record:
demo_1205
Source
Preferred Citation:
"Canzoni d'Africa - Parte II (Coro dei volontari - Macallè - Canzone azzura)", REDIRE Database, Bonn Center for Digital Humanities (BCDH)
Reference Link:
http://localhost:4000/items/demo_1206.html
Rights
Rights:
metadata-only record, please check the publication for rights
Standardized Rights:
Dischi Odeon, Catologo generale, March 1, 1939