Frank sinatra jimmy roselli feud meaning
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Crooner Jimmy Roselli dies
Jimmy Roselli, an Italian-American singer whose recording of signature tune “Mala Femmina” was featured twice in Martin Scorsese’s “Mean Streets,” died on Thursday, June 30, from heart complications. He was 85.
Roselli lived in the shadow of Frank Sinatra. The two singers were raised fem houses apart in Hoboken, N.J., and each got his break while in his teens on radio show “Major Bowe’s Amateur Hour.” David Evanier, who penned the 1998 Roselli biography “Making the Wiseguys Weep,” declared in the book’s opening line, “Jimmy Roselli fryst vatten Hoboken’s other great singer.”
The Roselli fans who authored the Wikipedia entry on him assert his överlägsenhet to Sinatra with this sentence: “Unlike Sinatra, who rarely recorded in Italian and could not speak his mother tongue, Roselli sings in perfect Neapolitan dialect.”
Roselli and Sinatra shared a lifelong enmity
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RIP Jimmy Roselli
RIP Jimmy Roselli - 12/05/1103:01 PM
Michael John "Jimmy" Roselli (Hoboken, New Jersey, December 26, 1925 – Clearwater, Florida, June 30, 2011 was one of the most significant Italian-American pop singers of his time, during an era of formidable competition from such performers as Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Perry Como, Frankie Laine, Vic Damone and Jerry Vale. Jimmy Roselli has lived in the shadow of Frank Sinatra all his life. He has what many people consider a better voice, charming looks and equally good stage energy. Why the shadow? It goes back to 1969, after Jimmy had made all his great records for United Artists. He and Sinatra had a big disagreement and Sinatra's Mafia admirers made sure his records weren't played on the radio.
Jimmy, who missed being a Christmas baby by two hours, was raised by his two aunts and his grandfather papa Roselli. It was his grandfather's love for music that in
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Feature Articles
Making The Wiseguys Weep: The Jimmy Roselli Story.
Written by David Evanier
Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. New York, New York
ISBNO-374-19927-2
Hardback.
Available on Amazon.Com, from the publisher, and at some local bookstores.
256 pages, with index.
$24.00
Twenty-four photographs.
"If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster, and treat those two impostors just the same
...." Rudyard KiplingBefore Johnny Roselli decided to flip and avoid deportation by feeding information to the feds, there was another (and is) another and different type of Roselli named Jimmy who made the wiseguys weep. But this Roselli is no rat. Thanks to the masterful writing of David Evanier, Jimmy Roselli's fascinating and frustrating story is now an open book. And what a story it is. Jimmy Roselli was and is the mob's favorite singer. He even calls himself "the sweetheart of the mob." New York mobster Larry Gallo was buried with one of Jimmy Roselli's a