Michele Papadia - Out Of Gravity (2026) [Hi-Res]

  • 23 Jun, 14:49
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Artist:
Title: Out Of Gravity
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: A.MA RECORDS
Genre: Jazz Fusion
Quality: mp3 320 kbps / flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 48.0kHz
Total Time: 01:07:54
Total Size: 159 / 409 / 786 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Out Of Gravity
02. Afrolution
03. Miss Arrow
04. Balanced Entrophy
05. A New Beginning
06. Flowing Soul
07. Freedom To Live
08. Peace Of Mind
09. In My Soul
10. Freedom To Pray

At the end of this month, the independent label A.MA Records will release an album that resists easy categorization – a vibrant and intricately constructed work situated at the crossroads of funk and jazz fusion. Led by keyboardist Michele Papadia, the project brings together an international cast of musicians for a recording that balances rhythmic vitality with compositional sophistication.

Spanning influences from the 1970s to the present, the album unfolds as a layered dialogue between musical eras and traditions. Its foundations are deeply rooted in Afro-American musical forms, which shape the rhythmic and structural framework of the compositions. At the same time, European sensibilities surface in the melodic writing, lending the music a distinct tonal identity. The result is neither pastiche nor homage, but a fluid synthesis that feels both grounded and exploratory.

At the center of the project is a core quintet drawn from the upper ranks of contemporary Italian jazz: Fabrizio Bosso, Francesco Bearzatti, Francesco Ponticelli and Stefano Tamborrino. Their interplay provides the album with both precision and elasticity. Around this nucleus, Papadia expands the sonic palette with a diverse group of collaborators, including Washington-based vocalist and improviser Kokayi, Deshawn Alexander of Watermelon Funk, singer Angela Esmeralda, and Malian percussionist Kalifa Koné, whose work on congas and ngoni introduces a resonant, organic dimension.

This transcontinental ensemble embodies the collaborative ethos that defines the album. Each track is carefully constructed, yet never rigid, allowing space for individual expression within a cohesive framework. Out of Gravity can be heard as a reflection on the legacy of Black music, not as a fixed reference point, but as a living, evolving language. The performances themselves emphasize collective energy over individual display, favoring interaction, tension, and release.

Papadia’s command of these traditions is informed by a long history of collaboration with musicians such as Gianluca Petrella, Bobby Previte, Lars Danielsson, Manu Katché, Joe Bonamassa, Brian Auger, Eric Gales, Robben Ford and Kirk Fletcher. These experiences have shaped his musical vocabulary, though his writing remains immediately identifiable. Elements of baroque arrangement occasionally surface in the instrumentation, while certain passages evoke a cinematic atmosphere reminiscent of Goblin, the Italian ensemble known for scoring films by Dario Argento.

What ultimately emerges is not the product of a single cultural lineage, but the result of careful synthesis – multiple influences absorbed, examined, and reconfigured into a distinct artistic voice.

This is not an album designed for passive listening. Its structural complexity and shifting rhythmic frameworks may initially disorient some listeners. Yet that very density is also its strength. With each listen, new details come into focus: interwoven rhythmic patterns, subtle harmonic movements, and a continuous interplay between instruments that suggests an ongoing conversation rather than a fixed statement.

In that sense, Out of Gravity reveals itself gradually. It invites patience, attention, and return. Like an open book that resists closure, it does not deliver immediate answers. Instead, it poses questions, and leaves them suspended, waiting to be explored in the listener’s next encounter.