Gianluigi Trovesi - Fugace (2003) Lossless
Artist: Gianluigi Trovesi
Title: Fugace
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: ECM
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 59:58
Total Size: 354 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Fugace
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: ECM
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 59:58
Total Size: 354 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. As strange as a ballad
02. Sogno d'Orfeo
03. African Triptych
04. Canto di lavoro
05. Clumsy dancing of the fat bird
06. Siparietto I
07. Blues and West
08. Siparietto II
09. Il Domatore
10. Ramble
11. Siparietto III
12. Fugace
13. Siparietto IV
14. Toto nei Caraibi
Performers:
Gianluigi Trovesi, alto saxophone, piccolo, alto clarinets
Beppe Caruso, trombone
Massimo Greco, trumpet, electronics
Marco Remondini, cello, electronics
Roberto Bonati, double-bass
Marco Micheli, double-bass, electric bass
Fulvio Maras, percussion, electronics
Vittorio Marinoni, drums
Italian composer and clarinet master Gianluigi Trovesi has realized his own dream. For over a decade his recordings have included bits and pieces of the American jazz and blues he heard as a child and led him down the path from Bergamo to the world's jazz stages. But Fugace is different. Here, Trovesi and his octet create a veritable soundtrack to a film from the composer's imagination. They pay a great tribute to early American jazz, the kind found rolling down the streets of New Orleans in the teens and early '20s by Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, Jelly Roll Morton, and W.C. Handy. But this is no New Orleans tribute album in the usual sense. Trovesi has incorporated, like his countryman Nino Rota, the traditional folk song and dance forms of Italian music and allowed them to engage early American jazz on their own terms. Tarantellas and blues make great companions (or at least they do here), from the funeral marches evoked in "African Triptych" to the places where "Ramble" and "Blues and West" evoke Armstrong's "West End Blues" in a myriad of contrapuntal exchanges between horns and the rhythm section -- particularly the Trovesi clarinet and the double bass of Roberto Bonati, where long, restrained folk forms grace the 12 bars and free them. There's also the elegant, minimal, slippery swing of "Clumsy Dancing of the Fat Cat Bird," where electronics, cello, guitar, and trumpet vie for the center of a mix that gives way to a hard bop read of certain passages in "St. James Infirmary." In fact, based on this track, the title, and "Canto Di Lavorno," one can feel the influence of movie directors Michelangelo Antonioni and Pier Paolo Pasolini on Trovesi, utilizing music to create the space something will take place in rather than describe the action. From restrained to rollicking to nearly classical and reverent, Fugace is a special recording. It is the most forward-thinking and easily fully realized of Trovesi's distinguished body of work.