Core 'ngrato


"Core 'ngrato", also known by the first words "Catarì, Catarì", is a 1911 Neapolitan song by emigrant American composer Salvatore Cardillo with lyrics by :it:Riccardo Cordiferro|Riccardo Cordiferro.
It was adopted by Enrico Caruso but it is not known whether he commissioned Cardillo and Sisca to write it. It is the only well-known standard Neapolitan song to have been written in America.
In the song, Catarì's lover reproaches the girl for thoughtlessly and heartlessly rejecting his abiding love for her; he implores her not to forget that he has given her his heart and that his soul is in torment; and he says he has confessed his feelings to a priest, who advised him to let her go.
The song's title comes from the heartfelt passage, Core, core 'ngrato, te haie pigliato 'a vita mia! Tutt' è passato, e nun nce pienze cchiù!, which approximates in English to "Ungrateful heart, you have stolen my life! It's all over and you don't think about it anymore!".
Notable interpreters aside from Caruso himself include Giuseppe di Stefano, Beniamino Gigli, Mario Lanza, Dominic Chianese, Luciano Pavarotti, Dmitri Hvorostovsky, Sergio Franchi.
The song was sung in the season three finale of The Sopranos by Corrado Soprano Jr., portrayed by Dominic Chianese.