Summary

Newspaper adverstisement in Italian placed by Ugo Ceresoli of 'Mondo Import & Mondo Music', Carlton, congratulating singers Rita Newspaper advertisement featuring Pavone and Teddy Reno on their recent successful tour in Australia in 1986. On the reverse, advertisements for films including 'Ben Hur' to be shown at Cinema Italia, Clifton Hill.

Rita Pavone was born in Turin, Italy in 1945 and became an internationally successful ballad and rock singer through the 1960s. She also starred and appeared in many Italian films and on Italian television. She married Teddy Reno in 1968. Teddy Reno was an Italian singer during the 1950s, actor and record producer. He was born Ferrucio Merk Riccordi, in Trieste, 1926 and was the talent scout who found and launched Rita Pavone. Ugo Ceresoli was the proprietor of the music business and shop, Mondo Import & Mondo Music' at 304 Lygon Street, Carlton.

It is part of a collection of over 50 pieces which includes a button accordion, seven music stands, posters, scrapbooks, and digital photographs.

Ugo Ceresoli (1927-1996) emigrated from Italy to Australia, arriving in Melbourne in late 1952 on the 'Oceania'. Ugo was 25 years old and was an accomplished dance musician and accordionist. Reunited in Melbourne with his brother Bruno, they formed an Italian music band in Carlton, an inner suburb of Melbourne amidst a growing post-War Italian migrant community. In about 1953 they named their dance band 'Mokamba Orchestra' and performed Italian and Latin and other music styles for increasingly cross-cultural Melbourne audiences. They also appeared on radio and TV. Bruno died in 1970, but Ugo, joined by his wife Jo Muhrer (Laurance), a singer, continued perforrming with Mokambo Orchestra for over 40 years.

Physical Description

Advertisement printed on both sides in black and white on newsprint paper - words in Italian. On one side an advertisement congratulating visting Italian performers and including a large photograph of three people sitting, two men, one smoking a pipe the other in suit and tie, either side of a small short-haired woman. On the reverse an advertrisement for films and showing a drawing of a chariot and horses.

Significance

The Ugo Ceresoli and Mokambo Orchestra Collection documents the rising popularity of Italian-Latino music following mass Italian migration to Australia post-World War II. The collection provides invaluable insights into the experiences of those who migrated from Italy when faced with political, social and economic uncertainty in their country and a demand for white European labour in Australia.

While representing a post World War II migrant narrative of two young men from Italy settling in Carlton, it also explores broader themes of the establishment of a Carlton Italian community; the forging of small businesses in the 1950s and 1960s; and the thriving music and entertainment scene in Melbourne. The formation of numerous 'Italian-Latino' bands playing ballo italiano music led to this style being popular with both Italian communities and the broader public, contributing to an increasing admiration for Italian culture. The Mokambo Orchestra and its associated activities covers a period of over thirty years and was an integral part of the growing Italian community within inner Melbourne.

The collection comprises over 50 items donated by the Ceresoli family which have extensive research potential. It includes photographs, scrapbooks, newspaper articles, personal correspondence, a songbook, as well as one of Ugo Ceresoli's accordions and several of the orchestra's music stands. The collection is of broad social and political significance and reflects Australia's widening national identity. Many items in the Ugo Ceresoli and Mokambo Orchestra Collection are well provenanced to other well-known Italian-Latino bands, Italian musicians and other heritage collections, most notably the Italian Historical Society CO.AS.IT collection in Melbourne.

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