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Style,
sophistication,
elegance…
Where
can
we
find
that
old-school
cool
in
our
consumer
culture
of
instantly
disposable
celebrity?
Time
to
meet
Patrizio
Buanne.
Tall,
dark
and
handsome,
perfectly
groomed
and
impeccably
dressed,
the
clean-cut
Italian
with
the
rich
baritone
voice
is
an
enigma.
Inspired
by
the
singers
of
yesteryear,
Patrizio
harks
back
to
a
time
when
a
man
would
not
dream
of
singing
onstage
in
anything
less
than
a
suit,
shoes
polished,
clean-shaven,
hair
neatly
brushed,
with
a
dab
of
cologne
behind
the
ears.
Nothing
strange
about
that,
you
might
say.
Except
that
Patrizio
is
only
26
years
old
-
and
hopelessly
devoted
to
his
art
–
romantic
crooning.
Dean
Martin,
Paul
Anka,
Tom
Jones,
along
with
the
traditional
Italian
singers
–
these
are
the
men
he
idolises.
Unfashionable?
Perhaps,
on
first
impression.
But
as
they
say:
style
is
temporary
and
class
is
permanent.
‘less
is
more’.
“Those
artists
perform
great
melodies
–
it’s
so
fantastic
to
go
onstage
performing
beautiful
melodies
with
an
orchestra
behind
you”.
Patrizio’s
life
is
a
remarkable
story
in
itself.
He’s
won
countless
talent
shows,
played
Elvis
onstage
and
sung
for
the
Pope.
And
all
before
he
was
20.
Raised
in
Naples,
he
moved
to
Vienna
at
the
age
of
six
when
his
father
opened
Austria’s
first
pizzeria
and
lived
in
the
city
of
waltzes
and
white
horses.
But
his
fiercely
patriotic
father
would
play
only
Italian
music
at
home.
From
the
age
of
four,
Patrizio
would
sing
along
to
the
Neapolitan
songs
from
his
father’s
own
childhood.
“The
only
music
I
heard
was
Italian.
We
also
listened
to
Julio
Iglesias,
but
only
to
his
two
Italian
albums;
Dean
Martin,
but
only
That’s
Amore
because
it’s
in
Italian;
Elvis
Presley
but
only
Its
Now
Or
Never
because
the
tune
is
O
Sole
Mio.
And
of
course
the
Italian-American
crooners
like
Perry
Como,
Jerry
Vale,
Buddy
Greco,
Tony
Bennett
and
Al
Martino.
I
would
be
listening
and
singing
along
while
playing
with
my
toys
when
dad
recorded
the
music
for
his
restaurant.”
By
the
age
of
5
Patrizio
was
performing
the
same
songs
for
family
friends
in
the
living
room.
“I
would
get
into
fancy
dress
and
put
on
wigs
or
smooth
down
my
hair
with
water
to
look
like
the
crooners
I’d
seen
in
old
Sinatra
and
Bing
Crosby
films
that
we
watched
on
TV.”
When
he
was
8
his
parents
bought
him
a
guitar
and
at
11
years
old
Patrizio
made
his
first
public
performance
at
a
talent
contest
for
schools.
He
borrowed
his
father’s
white
dinner
jacket
and
sang
Only
You.
“Until
then
I
had
wanted
to
be
a
cook
like
my
father.
But
standing
on
that
stage
in
front
of
all
those
people
made
me
realise
what
I
really
wanted
to
be
was
a
professional
singer.”
The
same
year
Patrizio
saw
his
first
concert,
a
show
by
doo-wop
vocal
group
The
Platters
(the
original
performers
of
Only
You),
and
talked
his
way
backstage
to
meet
them.
“I
sang
Only
You
for
them
in
their
dressing
room
and
they
said
if
I
was
black,
I
would
be
invited
to
join
the
group!”
Also
at
13,
Patrizio
played
a
starring
role
in
his
primary
school’s
graduation
ball,
already
in
his
own
white
dinner
jacket
and
bow
tie
his
mother
bought
him
for
the
occasion.
“It
was
fantastic.
It
was
fun
and
the
people
liked
it.
I
got
my
first
pay
cheque
-
and
my
first
experience
with
girls!
All
those
17
and
18
year
old
girls
came
back
stage
and
I
didn’t
know
what
to
do.
I
had
my
first
dance
with
a
girl
that
night.”
Patrizio
began
to
enter
talent
competitions
–
and
always
won
first
prize.
He
even
won
a
contest
for
Elvis
impersonators,
his
prize
being
a
trip
to
Graceland
with
his
mum.
“All
the
other
entrants
were
older
guys
doing
Seventies
Elvis
in
jump
suits,
but
I
was
fascinated
by
the
50’s
and
60’s
so
dressed
like
a
rockabilly
and
sang
Heartbreak
Hotel.”
That
led
to
an
offer
to
play
the
lead
in
an
Austrian
stage
production
about
Elvis
when
he
was
16.
“I
was
still
at
school
and
all
my
friends
were
at
discos,
while
I
was
doing
my
homework
and
then
going
to
the
theatre.
It
was
fun,
girls
came
backstage”
At
the
age
of
17
Patrizio
was
invited
to
sing
for
the
Pope
in
Poland,
performing
in
front
of
his
biggest
audience
yet
-
85,000
people
-
when
the
Pontiff
said
mass
on
a
papal
visit
to
his
home
country.
That
led
to
a
recording
contract
and
at
17
Patrizio
began
to
gain
a
reputation
in
Poland.
“I
used
to
go
to
school
in
Vienna
from
Monday
to
Friday
and
every
Friday
I’d
go
to
Poland
where
I
had
a
successful
single
in
the
charts.
I’d
do
two
concerts
over
the
weekend
then
on
Sunday
nights
I’d
get
the
midnight
train
back
to
Vienna,
doing
my
homework
on
the
journey,
and
my
mum
would
meet
me
at
6.30am
on
Monday
and
take
me
straight
to
school.”
Tragedy
followed
when
his
beloved
father
died
shortly
after
Patrizio’s
17th
birthday
and,
grief-stricken,
Patrizio
almost
lost
his
own
life
to
a
perforated
ulcer.
But
one
thing
made
him
determined
to
survive.
“I
had
promised
my
father
I
would
be
a
superstar
and
make
my
name
–
his
name
–
famous.
It
is
always
music
that
reminds
me
of
my
father
and
makes
me
happy.”
In
1999
Patrizio
took
up
an
uncle’s
offer
to
return
to
Italy
and,
after
winning
yet
another
talent
show,
found
himself
offered
a
job
as
a
TV
entertainer.
Soon
he
was
one
of
the
most
popular
young
faces
on
Italian
television,
hosting
his
own
show
in
between
studying
languages
at
university
in
Rome.
“It
was
a
big
contract
with
fantastic
money,
a
fantastic
flat
in
the
centre
of
Rome.
But
my
dream
was
still
to
be
a
recording
artist
–
and
most
of
all
to
be
successful
in
Great
Britain
and
America.”
In
2003
Patrizio
was
introduced
to
music
producer
Christian
Seitz.
They
both
shared
the
same
passion
and
vision
for
music
so,
bravely
quitting
his
burgeoning
TV
career,
they
went
to
work
on
the
album
-
going
into
London’s
world-famous
Abbey
Road
studios
with
the
Royal
Philharmonic
Orchestra
to
realise
his
dream.
18
months
later
the
result
is
‘L’Italiano’
(‘The
Italian’),
an
album
mixing
traditional
Neapolitan
romance
and
singing
tradition
with
Italian
standards
from
the
Fifties
and
Sixties
–
songs
barely
known
outside
Italy
but
destined
to
become
favourites
for
a
new
generation.
“Everyone
is
familiar
with
the
Latino
lover,
singers
like
Julio
Igelsias
or
Ricky
Martin.
The
concept
for
this
album
is
the
Italian
lover,”
says
producer
Christian
Seitz.
“I
want
to
give
people
Italian
romance.
Growing
up
outside
Italy,
I
feel
even
more
Italian
than
a
native,
because
I
was
raised
with
this
cliché
of
pasta
eating,
hand
gesturing,
Alfa
Romeo
driving…
My
father
was
the
ambassador
of
Italian
kitchen
and
pizza
and
I
am
the
ambassador
of
Italian
romance
and
dolce
vita,”
says
Patrizio.
To
listen
to
Patrizio
is
to
immerse
yourself
in
the
soundtrack
of
a
world
familiar
from
film
and
television
–
from
Federico
Fellini,
Sophia
Loren
and
Gina
Lollabrigida
to
The
Godfather,
Goodfellas
and
The
Sopranos.
“My
music
is
as
Italian
as
pasta
in
an
Italian
kitchen,”
says
Patrizio.
These
songs
are
timeless
classics.
To
me,
crooning
is
more
than
a
way
of
singing,
it’s
a
way
of
life
!
And
I
want
to
share
that
with
a
new
audience.”
With
the
smooth
sounds
of
the
Fifties
and
Sixties
coming
back
into
fashion
it
seems
that
Patrizio
is
in
the
right
place
at
the
right
time.
.
.
.
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