Concerto Zero is a double album by Campo di Marte that was released in 2003 on the independent label Vinyl Magic - Btf with a beautiful packaging and extended liner notes about the history of the band. Soon after 1974 Campo di Marte split up, guitarist Enrico Rosa, main composer and lyricist of the band, left Italy and relocated in Denmark. It wasn’t until 2003 that Campo di Marte came to life again for some concerts in Tuscany and for the recording of this live album with a new line up featuring Enrico Rosa (acoustic and electric guitar, vocals), Eva Rosa (recorders, WX5 wind synth), Mauro Sarti (drums), Maurilio Rossi (bass - from Goad) and Alexandr Matin Sass (piano, organ, keyboards).
The first CD contains four tracks taken from a 1972 concert recorded at a venue in Florence, The Space Electronic. According to the liner notes, it was conceived as a demo recording and it’s nothing but a document of the early days of the band, before the release of their eponymous album. Four tracks for little more than half an hour music where you can hear in nuce from the original line up many ideas that will be developed on the debut album. Listening to “Prologo parte 2 (Settimo Tempo)”, “Alba (Secondo Tempo)”, “Epilogo (Quarto Tempo)” and “Prologo parte 1 (Quinto Tempo/Sesto Tempo)” could be interesting for fans of the band but the sound quality is really awful and I fear that all the efforts to recover the music from the original source (an old test pressing LP) were almost pointless...
The second CD was recorded “live in studio” in 2003, a good way to warm up for the concerts of the thirtieth anniversary of the band... Of course, the sound quality is definitely better. “Primo - Settimo Tempo”, a medley from the eponymous album, is a great opener where it can be seen that the magic is not gone even after the long hiatus. Enrico Rosa here shows to be still alive and kicking and the new line up is up to the task... The following “Back In Time” is a dreamy instrumental track with a medieval flavour that could recall The John Renbourn Group. It gives way to “Bluesy Rocky”, where the rhythm rises and the band mix delicate jazzy passages and harder parts with gusto, then it’s the turn of “Italian Irish”, a calm acoustic ballad turning into a kind of tarantella that reminds me slightly of BMS (in particular of Non mi rompete finale).
After three interesting new tracks the old repertoire comes back for the new arrangements of “Secondo Tempo” and “Terzo - Quarto Tempo” with another short new track, “Rock Barock”, that ends the set with a burst of positive energy. A live recording, considered a bonus track, “Outro: July The 12th 2003” closes the second CD.
On the whole, a good appetizer that unfortunately did not lead to the release of a brand new studio album featuring only new original prog stuff from Campo di Marte. But you never know, Enrico Rosa is still active and maybe, if someone asks him, for the fiftieth anniversary of the band...
You can listen to the complete album HERE
More info:
https://www.campodimarte.dk/On the whole, a good appetizer that unfortunately did not lead to the release of a brand new studio album featuring only new original prog stuff from Campo di Marte. But you never know, Enrico Rosa is still active and maybe, if someone asks him, for the fiftieth anniversary of the band...
You can listen to the complete album HERE
More info:
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