Description
To call Stefano Battaglia's Re: Pasolini on ECM, ambitious would be an erroneous understatement. In fact, it is an undertaking of enormous propensity. In the United States, Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922-1975) is known primarily as a filmmaker, whose works such as the Decameron, Canterbury Tales, Medea, and the notorious Salo (based on the Marquis de Sade's mammoth encyclopedic novel of perversion and violence, the 120 Days of Sodom, reset in the Italian countryside during the Second World War). He was in fact, a true renaissance man in the grand Italian tradition and was widely known as one: he wasmore… a popular poet, playwright, journalist, novelist, actor, painter, linguist and a truly controversial political activist who also challenged the Italian government, the Church and consumerist Italy openly. He was brutally murdered on an empty beach on the evening of All Saints Day (the murder has never been fully explained). Pasolini was a giant figure, a near mythic figure in Italian society and an aesthetic giant in all of Europe. So how does one represent such a figure in music? Battaglia has decided to look at Pasolini's life and work in equal measure. He celebrates and examines them so closely in his medium, so as to be as close to the inside eye of the artist — and perhaps the man — as is possible. Over two discs, he uses two different ensembles to meditate upon the legacy left by this great and tragic artist through his chosen medium: a music that combines in equal parts jazz, classical, and improvisation. Disc one features a sextet that includes trumpeter Michael Gassman who has been collaborating with Battaglia for 15 years. The other members of this first ensemble include Mirco Mariotinni on clarinet, cellist Aya Shimura, bassist Salvatore Majore, and drummer Roberto Dani. The music here is lighter; reflective, melodic even at its moodiest. The opening track "Canzone di Laura Betti," is a song inspired by Pasolini's muse, an actress who worked not only with him but also Bernardo Bertolucci, Alberto Rosselini Federico Fellini and other great Italian directors. Led so beautifully by the piano, the tune serves the deep lyricism of the truly Italian form of jazz, cinema music and the ballads sung by traditional Italian singers, and even opera arias. The cello lilts in and around the piano as it quietly digs into the lyric line and celebrates it to brushed drums and a simple bassline. This gorgeous piece reflects on the actress in a nearly spiritual manner. Other tunes here reflect poems written by Pasolini, and the place of actors he worked with, and the fifth cut, "Fevrar," is named for one of Pasolini's poems. Battaglia uses it as an implement for melodic improvisation on a rural landscape. Sparse, nearly skeletal lyric lines open mysteriously and are commented ... Read More...
| Disc 1 |
| 1 |
Canzone di Laura Betti |
| 2 |
Toto' e Ninetto |
| 3 |
Canto Popolare |
| 4 |
Cosa Sono le Nuvole? |
| 5 |
Fevrar |
| 6 |
Il Sogno di Una Cosa |
| 7 |
Teorema |
| 8 |
Callas |
| 9 |
Pietra Lata |
| Disc 2 |
| 1 |
Lyra I |
| 2 |
Lyra II |
| 3 |
Meditazione Orale |
| 4 |
Lyra III |
| 5 |
Lyra IV |
| 6 |
Scritti Corsari |
| 7 |
Lyra V |
| 8 |
Epigrammi |
| 9 |
Lyra VI |
| 10 |
Setaccio |
| 11 |
Lyra VII |
| 12 |
Mimesis, Divina Mimesis |
| 13 |
Lyra VIII |
| 14 |
Ostia |
| 15 |
Pasolini |
Info:
- Category:
- Music > Albums
- Case Type:
- CD
- Release Type:
- Retail
- Comments:
- 1 read add
Loading...
Cover Info:
- Title:
- Stefano Battaglia - Re: Pasolini (2007) Retail CD
- Part:
- Front
- Dimensions:
- 1409 x 1409 px
- Size:
- 143 KB
- Downloads:
- 80 (0 today)
- Uploaded:
- 16/10/08 by Lord Wotton
- Quality Rating:
-
- Currently /5 Stars.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
Cover not yet rated. Click CDs to vote!
Only registered users may vote or report covers.
Please login, or register.
Other Available Parts: