Patrick Esposito Di Napoli

Patrick Esposito Di Napoli (January 18, 1964 – November 13, 1994) was a musician and member of the Quebec musical band Les Colocs, for which he played harmonica.[1]

Patrick Esposito.

Early life and education

Di Napoli was born to a family of Italian descent in Perpignan, in the Pyrénées-Orientales département in France.

Career

He started making music in the 1970s, sometimes writing his own lyrics and melodies. For a time he lived with other musicians in an artist's loft in Montreal.[2]

Di Napoli wrote the song "Séropositif Boogie", which appeared on the band's first album in 1993, about living with HIV.[3] He had contracted the virus from a tainted needle. He died on November 13, 1994, of complications from AIDS.[4][5]

Les Colocs paid homage to him by using pictures of him during live shows. They dedicated their final album, Dehors Novembre (November Begone) (1998), to Di Napoli. [6] It is considered their best album.[1] (The title track, written by lead singer Dédé Fortin, expressed the point of view of a dying man).

gollark: I might be wiser in a few ways, but mostly I would have advanced future knowledge™.
gollark: I would then use this to subtly influence future (past) events I don't like, such as "brexit".
gollark: I could just attain money via ??? child things, spend it on some bitcoins (or even *mine* it, since it took a while for people to catch onto GPUs then ASICs) and then have 19024719827490 capital.
gollark: I have vague knowledge of deep learning things which are really recent and would probably substantially accelerate progress if brought to the past somehow. More importantly, though, I would simply buy bitcoin.
gollark: Anyway, if *I* were magically sent back in time I could do better.

See also

References

  1. Kelly, Brendan (June 2, 2008). "Recreating a rock legend". The Gazette (Montreal). Archived from the original on May 15, 2012. Retrieved 2009-07-28.
  2. "En souvenir de Dédé". Vanessa_Guimond, 5 June 2016 Journal de Quebec.
  3. "Je n'aimais pas Les Colocs". 03 August 2009, Marc Cassivi, La Presse
  4. "Les Colocs". MusiquePlus (in French). Archived from the original on May 25, 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-28.
  5. "Il y a 25 ans : Les Colocs – Les Colocs". Voir, Olivier Boisvert-Magnen 27 September 2018
  6. "Les Colocs : les origines". L'Hebdo Journal, 21 juin 2013.


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