Roberto Pregadio | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 15 November 2010 81) | (aged
Occupation | composer |
Roberto Pregadio (6 December 1928 – 15 November 2010) was an Italian composer, conductor and TV-personality.
Born in Catania and graduated in piano at the San Pietro a Majella Conservatory in Naples, in 1960 Pregadio became a pianist in the RAI Light Music Orchestra.[1][2] From the second half of the sixties, for about fifteen years, he composed and directed about fifty musical scores. In the 1980s he founded a jazz ensamble, the Sestetto Swing di Roma.[3]
As composer he was probably best known for the whistled musical score for the 1969 Spaghetti Western The Forgotten Pistolero, that he composed with Franco Micalizzi and that was later used in several episodes of The Ren & Stimpy Show.
In Italy he was also well known as the partner of Corrado Mantoni, from 1968 to 1997, and later of Gerry Scotti until 2007, in the radio and TV show La corrida.[2][1][3]
Selected filmography
- Kriminal (1966)
- Our Men in Bagdad (1966)
- The Glass Sphinx (1967)
- The Last Killer (1967)
- A Hole in the Forehead (1968)
- Ciccio Forgives, I Don't (1968)
- King of Kong Island (1968)
- Brutti di notte (1968)
- Satanik (1968)
- The Forgotten Pistolero (1969)
- Franco, Ciccio e il pirata Barbanera (1969)
- Paths of War (1970)
- Erika (1971)
- Smile Before Death (1972)
- Death Carries a Cane (1973)
- Catene (1974)
- La minorenne (1974)
- So Young, So Lovely, So Vicious... (1975)
- That Malicious Age (1975)
- SS Experiment Camp (1976)
- Il medico... la studentessa (1976)
- Seagulls Fly Low (1978)
- The Last House on the Beach (1978)
- Mondo Cannibale (1980)
References
- 1 2 Enzo Giannelli. "Pregadio, Roberto". Gino Castaldo (edited by). Dizionario della canzone italiana. Curcio Editore, 1990. p. 1388.
- 1 2 Eva Carducci (15 November 2010). "Il mondo dello spettacolo in lutto: addio al Maestro Roberto Pregadio". Eco del Cinema. Archived from the original on 7 April 2012. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
- 1 2 Gallo, Tano (16 November 2010). "Pregadio, ultimo applauso per il maestro degli stonati". La Repubblica (in Italian). Retrieved 30 April 2023.
External links