Padula is a fascinating figure, and Francese has done a wonderful job of bringing him to life and of making the case for [. . .] Il Bruzio as bearer of a previously unheard voice of the South. [. . .] Francese is careful not to underestimate the paternalism of Padula’s strategy, at the same time he underscores the rarity of such a device, and the respect it confers onto the woman’s voice, however ventriloquized it might be.