Showing posts with label Varese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Varese. Show all posts

Friday, 4 November 2022

CINCINNATO'S COME-BACK

Cincinnato split up in 1973 and it wasn’t until 2010 that two original members, Giacomo Urbanelli (piano, keyboards) and Gianni Fantuzzi (guitars), had a new go under the name Thauma Cincinnato along with Franco Erenti (keyboards, synth) and Paolo Burattin (bass, acoustic guitar) who had already collaborated with the band in the seventies. In 2016 they self-produced a new album entitled L'essere e l'auriga, mixing modern sounds and vintage atmospheres and with more focus on lyrics than on their debut work from the seventies. During the recording sessions they were helped by some guests such as Graziano Rampazzo (drums), Ilaria Guerra (vocals), Tina Nocerino (vocals), Erminio Grassi (percussion), Luciano Cirino (piano), Fra Flower (darbuka, percussion), Serena Erenti (French horn) and Maurizio Vaccalluzzo (trumpet) who gave their contribute to enrich the sound while Salvatore Scianna took charge of the album cover...


The opener “Colori di noi” (Colours of us) is a slow, reflective track where music and lyrics conjure up a wave of melancholy that hugs you, light and strong like a veil, coloured and transparent. Hidden, painful emotions and disquieting feelings are like mysterious colours that only our eyes can perceive...

The nervous “Espectadores Part 1” follows alternating almost obsessive rhythms, hypnotic passages and charming flamenco guitar patterns. It depicts in music and words dizzying, hammering images hitting heavily upon a passive audience. Between news, arguments, debates and many contradictions eventually what’s left is a desperate need to switch off the devilish media machine...

“La peste” (The plague) is a sarcastic bluesy jazz ballad that deals with a kind of social plague provoking the degeneration of ideals and the regression of civilization. As social dynamics and political debates turn into wild animal fights, the memories of the past got lost leading to a present where optimism and sweet oblivion are the therapy that set a sleepy mankind free from the spectre of freedom and its responsibilities...



The rather weak “Dialogo” (Dialogue) is an ironic piece where male and female vocals play the role of a man and a woman whose marriage is falling apart, a dialogue that evokes an outrageous and bitter battle... Then it’s the turn of the soft, dreamy “In bici nel parco” (Cycling in the park) that begins by a delicate classical guitar arpeggio and tells in music and words of a quiet, idyllic park ride of a man and a woman in a sunny day on their bicycles. It marks a strong contrast with the previous track...

The title of the following “Dasein” refers to a fundamental concept in the existential philosophy of Martin Heidegger, a form of being that is aware of and must confront such issues as personhood, mortality and the dilemma or paradox of living in relationship with other humans while being ultimately alone with oneself. Here the music and lyrics invite you to search for time and a place where to stay in harmony with the human nature and the environment... 

Thauma Cincinnato 2016

 
The melancholic, reflective “Tu” (You) tells of the difficulty to overcome the crisis of a relationship and hangs between nostalgia and time passing by while the sense of life escapes and the past becomes a border hard to cross... Then “Espectadores Part 2” conjures up the image of a person who seems losing his individuality getting lost in the crowd, like a sheep following the herd, looking at life like a spectator...

The last track, “Città Oceano” (City Ocean), begins by a dreamy instrumental section, then the sound of the waves in the background and a soft piano pattern lead to soaring vocals, calypso rhythms and exotic flavours depicting images of an imaginary city where the grey and noisy streets are dangerously crowded. It’s a city that attracts and crumbles who fall under its wild, brutal charm. There are cars lined up like mannequins on the catwalk as groups of thirsty people look for the miraculous source of wondrous objects, fruits of a dreamy ocean. But as the images of this fantastic future world unfold before the eyes of the protagonist, he realizes that he does not want to change. For him it’ better diving into the eyes of his sweetheart, in a lost desire that now touches his naked soul...

On the whole, a good album although very different from Cincinnato’s eponymous debut work. Old fans could be a bit disappointed...

More info:

Tuesday, 1 November 2022

REBELS AND FOOLS

Cincinnato took form in 1970 under the name Eros Natura in Marnate, a small town in the province of Varese. They changed their name into Cincinnato when they signed a deal with the PDU label in 1972. The new name refers to a statesman and military leader of the early Roman Republic who became a legendary figure of virtue and whose name is still synonym of a person who does not fall in love with power and honours but prefers a simple and modest life. In 1973 the band managed to record an eponymous album with a line up featuring Giacomo Urbanelli (keyboards, vibraphone, vocals), Gianni Fantuzzi (guitar), Annibale Vanetti (bass) and Donato Scolese (drums). Their music draws on many influences, from jazz to hard rock, but the band tried to shape their own compositions in an original way, in full freedom, through long jam sessions. The recording process of the album took only a few days and a low budget, so the result is uneven...


 
The opener is a long instrumental track, “Il ribelle ubriaco” (The drunken rebel) that starts with a burst of energy. Then a calmer, dreamy section follows before a new acceleration that brings a vague atmosphere of chaos and turns into a fiery tarantella rhythm that could recall PFM...

“Tramonto d’ottobre” (October sunset) is a delicate, dreamy track based on a slow piano pattern evoking autumnal atmospheres, falling leaves and beautiful colours... Then “Esperanto” ends the first side of the LP with strong jazz flavours and a pulsing rhythm, blending many musical languages into one...

 
The long, complex “L’ebete” (The fool) is the only sung piece of this work and stretches along the whole second side of the original vinyl. In my opinion it’s an excellent piece with a visionary atmosphere and evocative lyrics that conjure up the image of a man who feels like a fool in front of the mystery of life and death. He can’t understand what he really sees, he can hear confused voices around him, surprise and fear hit hard on his heart and he stands still, bewildered by the power of nature, overwhelmed by love and a sense of pity for his fragility... After a first part where vocals take the lead, a long instrumental journey follows driving you through many different emotional landscapes...

Unfortunately, the album was released only in 1974 when the band had already called it a day, it wasn’t adequately promoted by the label and was soon forgotten, until its re-release on CD. The AMS new edition features three bonus tracks: a new version of “Tramonto d’ottobre” recorded in 2006 by Giacomo Urbanelli and Donato Scolese plus Piero Orsini on bass, a new piece entitled “Tangando”, recorded in 2006 by the same trio, and a live recording dating back to 1972, “Eros natura”, with a very poor sound quality...

On the whole, a good work from a band that would have deserved more credit.

You can listen to the complete album HERE

Cincinnato: Cincinnato (1974). Other opinions:
Jim Russell: The music is quite lovely and interesting to my ears. My best description would be spacious, atmospheric, esoteric, a little spacey, warm, and with a decidedly unhurried, laid back feel to it. This is largely (though not completely) instrumental music whose goal seems to be the spirit of improvisation. I would recommend it very much to listeners who love a patient exploration of rock building and subsiding slowly with piano, acoustic and electric guitar, bass, and agile drumming... (read the complete review HERE)


Monday, 10 May 2021

POPES AND KINGS

Twenty Flying Kings is the fourth studio album by Court, from Varese. It was recorded during several sessions that took place between 2007 and 2012 and finally released in 2012 on the independent label Ma.Ra.Cash Records with the renewed line up featuring Marco Pedrini (vocals), Mosè Nodari (guitars, oboe, recorders, vocals), Jacopo Favrin (bass), Marco Strobel (guitar, mandolin, keyboards) and Francesco Vedani (drums, percussion, keyboards) plus some guests such as Luigi Bonacina (bass), Andrea Balliano (classical guitar), Giandomenico Fraschini (piano) and Andrea Cajelli (percussion). The album summarizes the history of the band, whose roots date back to 1990, and marks a new starting point. In fact, it features four pieces from their early period re-arranged by the new line up, two tracks originally released on the Colossus-Musea themed album The Divine Comedy Part I – Dante’s Inferno and one previously unreleased track... 

  
 

The opener “Cries” is a shortened, condensed but not less effective version of a piece from the 1993 debut album “And You'll Follow The Winds' Rush 'till Their Breath Dwells”, a heartfelt complaint against war and tyranny. There’s no glorious victory that can revive the dead nor heal the ruin left behind by the armies fighting in the name of their whimsical kings... 
 
The following “Anastasius’ Epitaph” and “The Great Bear Rising” are linked together and come from Dante’s Inferno. Their source of inspiration is the Canto XI of the Divine Comedy that describes the meeting between the sommo poeta and Pope Anastasius II. In a damned place where even spring has a strange smell words like heresy and betrayal hide an obscure meaning... 
 

 
“Sumptuous Moment” is an extended new version of the wonderful epic from Court’s second album Distances, where the band manage to develop some ideas and showcase great maturity and gusto. It’s a visionary celebration of the power of Mother Nature, inspired by the poetry of Emily Dickinson, where a thunder storm combines the charms of winter and of hell... Here folk influences and classical flavours are combined with the energy of rock instruments to conjure up a dreamy atmosphere and bring to life wandering shadows lost in the woods under the moon... 
 
Court 2019

 
The first version of the melancholic “Lovers” was originally released on the debut album and here the band gives new life to the tragic story of a princess that preys night and day for the return of his beloved knight who is gone abroad, over the see, to fight in the name of the his king. When the army comes back without him she jumps down from the tower to fly away and meet her man... 
 
The short, delicate acoustic ballad “Dream Tale” is the only original track and tells of a child who dreams of being a brave knight in a fantastic world full of adventures... It takes to the re-arranged version of another long epic piece from the debut album, “Alviss’ Revenge”, inspired by Norse Mythology and Nordic sagas. It tells a bloody story of rings and vengeance, kings and Valkyries, robberies and murders and ends an album that is really worth listening to. 
 
 
Have a try! 
 
 
You can listen to the complete album HERE
 
 
More info:



 

Saturday, 28 September 2013

A VISUAL PERCEPTION OF SOUNDS

Ske is the brainchild of keyboardist and composer from Varese Paolo “Ske” Botta who features also in the line up of bands such as Yugen and Not A Good Sign. In 2010 he gathered around him some excellent musicians such as Fabio Ciro Ceriani (percussion), Valerio Cipollone (clarinet), Enrica Di Bastiano (harp), Maurizio Fasoli (piano), Elia Leon Mariani (violin), Nicolas Nikolopoulos (flute), Giuspeppe Jos Olvini (theremin, percussion), Roberta Pagani (vocals), Valerio Neth Reina (vocals), Mattia Signò (drums), Markus Stauss (sax), Fabrice Toussaint (trombone), Pierre Wawrzyniak (bass) and Francesco Zago (guitars) for the recording sessions of a début album, “1000 Autunni” (Thousand Autumns), that was released in 2011 on the independent label Altr0ck/Fading Records). The result is an amazing instrumental work, extremely rich in sounds and ideas, where you can find a perfectly balanced mix of classical influences, vintage keyboards, symphonic rock, avant-garde and many more. Anyway, the beautiful art work might describe the music better than my words.


The opener “Fraguglie” sets the atmosphere painting an evocative autumnal landscape. You can almost hear the gentle steps of a giant moving through an enchanted wood and directed to the court of the Crimson King. You can even hear some nice tunes soaring from the wood, then the mood becomes hypnotic and you risk to get lost. The following “Denti” (Teeth) is darker and filled with a heavy tension.


Well, perhaps the giant is not directed to the hall of a British castle but in a mysterious nursing home in the Carpathian mountains. The music goes on with the exotic, sensual “Carta e Burro” (Paper and butter) and the nervous, tense “Scrupoli” (Scruples). To be honest, I've recently read a novel by French writer Maurice Renard titled L'homme truqué (The phoney man) and when listening to this album the rhythm and the images evoked by the book come back to my mind, I can't help it! The novel starts as a crime story: a physician is murdered, then the investigations reveal some secret experiments on human beings and the attempt to discover a sixth sense through the implantation of electroscopes into a blind man's eyes. What would it happen if they applied an electrical-ear on your optical nerves? “You would see the sounds, you wouldn't listen to them any more, you would have a visual perception of the world of sounds...”.


Delta” begins with a relaxed, dreamy mood that seems to conjure up some memories from a happy childhood, then the course of thoughts risks to get lost in the ripples. “Scogli 1” (Rocks 1) comes as a short, disquieting break while the ethereal “Sotto sotto” (Underneath) delves into the unconscious... “Those who have lost their loved ones know the sacred game of reviving them concentrating all the forces of memory and imagination to create shadows that look like them...”. Just another short quotation from L'homme truqé to introduce the following “Mummia” (Mummy) and its bold games of shadows and lights.



Scogli 2” (Rocks 2) is a short, dark interlude that leads to the charming “La Nefazia di Multatuli” (I fear the title can't be translated and I don't know if it contains any reference to the Dutch writer Multatuli or to a siren queen called Nefazia). Another short interlude, “Scogli 3” (Rocks 3) leads to the conclusive “Rassegnati” (Resigned), a beautiful, complex track with sudden changes in mood and rhythm.

On the whole, this is a great instrumental album where not a single note sounds out of place. It could be the perfect score for a thriller, the music is challenging but never boring and it's really worth listening to.

Ske: 1000 Autunni (2011). Other opinions:
Raffaella Benvenuto-Berry: An intriguing, refined album, 1000 Autunni offers something for nearly everyone. Even though those who crave extended compositions, with flights of instrumental fancy and lush vocal harmonies, will probably not appreciate the album as much as RIO/Avant and Canterbury devotees, this is a truly eclectic effort that bridges the gap between the great Seventies tradition and the more forward-thinking directions of progressive rock. Like most AltrOck releases, the album is also a treat in the visual sense, with a stunning cover shot of autumn leaves (taken by Botta himself, who has a background in design and visual communication) and the stylish layout of the very detailed liner notes. Definitely one of those discs whose full potential will unfold at every successive listen, 1000 Autunni is poised to become one of the standout releases of 2011... (read the complete review HERE)
Steven Reid: Not for the feint hearted, 1000 Autunni is a hugely satisfying and rewarding listening experience which makes an immediate impression, whilst still growing in stature the more familiar you become with it. Impressive stuff indeed... (read the complete review HERE)


Sunday, 23 October 2011

A TASTY RECIPE

Court is prog band from Varese that was formed in 1990 by five skilled young musicians: Paolo Lucchina (vocals), Mosè Nodari (guitars, oboe and recorders), Luigi Bonacina (bass), Andrea Costanza (guitar) and Francesco Vedani (drums, flute and recorders).


Their debut album, “And You'll Follow The Winds' Rush 'till Their Breath Dwells”, was recorded in Germany and released in 1993 by the indie label Music Is Intelligence. It features a very interesting and fresh blend of rock and classical influences... If you like bands like The Strawbs, Gryphon and Amazing Blondel I’m sure you’ll enjoy it!

A short instrumental opener “Rising The Tale” leads to the long and complex epic “Alviss’ Revenge” that tells a cruel story inspired by Nordic Sagas... “Flying from the south / Maidens came through the dark forest / Young Goddesses they were Valkyries / On the seashore they set to rest / Spinning precious flax...”. The music flows for more than fifteen minutes avoiding the kingdom of boredom...

“Lovers” is a beautiful, tragic prayer, a particular ballad with a dramatic “Romantic” feeling while the next track, the dreamy  “Eckol” reminds me slightly of Gryphon and Angelo Branduardi... “I’ve fallen asleep dreaming of colours growing inside / I’ve fallen asleep dreaming of colours growing inside / Night! It’s the time, I’ll have my best / See you next sunset, Eckol my friend...”.


The long and complex “Cries” is a beautiful “anti-war epic”... While the music goes through many changes in rhythm and atmosphere the lyrics describe the celebration for the return of a victorious army... But in the crowd someone can’t stand it, a soldier who is speaking up against his mind: “There is no meaning, nonsense is war / We claim for us the rights of lands / As slaves we humble before a tyrant / And him we pray though he slew us / I lost my will in lies of king / I blinded my eyes and denied my dreams / I lost the chance to smile to dawn / To hope at dusk and fly by night...”.

“Willow Tears” is an amazing instrumental for guitar, while “Mirth For A Guest” is another short and joyful piece that recalls Gryphon. “The Song Of The Omniscent Dwarf” is a long ballad that every now and again reminds me of Amazing Blondel and that tells the story of a dwarf cheated by the God Odin and petrified by the sun. The instrumental “R.” and “Fading The Tale” close this excellent work.

The whole album can be legally downloaded for free from the official website of the band. So, have a try! Click HERE


Four years after their excellent debut work Court released “Distances”, an album featuring less folk and medieval influences and a soft, refined rock sound that every now and again could recall Pink Floyd. Here you can find “wider spaces”, “purer sounds” and “crimson reveries in a cage of beauty and grace”.  

“Does my singing live just when someone is enjoying it? / Or maybe it behaves like the wind that blows over seas although there are no leaves to stir? / I say: It lives because someone has lived and sang it... it lives because someone has lived...”. After the short instrumental opener “Shantàl (Far)”, the hypnotic and melancholic “The Turn I Was Gifted” drives you in a dreamy mood, followed by “Joy” (where the rhythm takes off like a “Zeppelin”), “The Spell Of The Rain” and the acoustic instrumental “View Gone”. The words and music draw moony soundscapes where acoustic guitars and flutes are in the forefront... Then comes the amazing long, complex epic “Sumptuous Moment”, inspired by the poetry of Emily Dickinson, my favourite track on this album, closer to the sound of their previous work, where folk influences are blended with a strong classical romantic flavour. Good also the other epic “Carved Box” and the soft instrumental “Close”... “The box is now closing / With her walk through the time / Kept safe inside...”.

Since the album can be legally downloaded for free from the official website of the band, have a try and judge it by yourselves! Click HERE


Court’s third album, “Frost Of Watermelon”, was released in 2007, ten years after “Distances”. It’s more heterogeneous and features a richer sound. The line up features a new guitarist, Marco Strobl, who stepped in taking the place of Andrea Costanza and during the recording sessions the band was helped by some guest musicians... The “recipe” is tasty and well balanced, including “ingredients” such as classical and acoustic guitars, mellotron, recorders and glockenspiel along with powerful bass lines, electric guitars and “smashed pumpkins”. Well, this band is not stuck in the past and you can find on this work not only echoes of Genesis and Pink Floyd but some “grungy passages” as well.

“I will be back again / Just to step and fly away / Believe me / I founded my world on a dream...”. In my opinion the highlights on this album are the dreamy “My World” and the hypnotic, mysterious instrumental “Bridge To Maya”. Interesting also the long and complex suite “Mad and Child” and the acoustic ballad “When I Lose”. The overall result is very good, so... “Sprinkle on the frost of watermelon” with slivers of dark chocolate, put the bowls in the fridge and serve cold”!

This album was immediately followed by a tour in the USA and the young Jacopo Favrin replaced Luigi Bonacina on bass. The tour culminated in an unforgettable concert in Hollywood, the band was spotted by some US promoters who convinced them to enter the Los Angeles Music Awards and in November 2007 Court were awarded Best Alternative Band by the jury. In 2009 a new vocalist, Marco Pedrini, took the place of Paolo Lucchina. The story continues...


Read the interview with the band on Progarchives, click HERE


More info:

Monday, 26 September 2011

LOMBARDIA (part 3)

And now let’s visit the other cities of Lombardia. Nearby Milan there’s MONZA, in the Brianza area, best known for hosting every year the Formula 1 Grand Prix. In the seventies E.A.Poe (Facebook) came from here while now it’s the time of Zita Ensemble (MySpace), an instrumental project that blends progressive, jazz and psychedelic influences, of the heavier Dea (Facebook) and of the “Celtic rage” of the folk metal Furor Gallico (Facebook). The nearby town of Meda is home to Forza Elettro Motrice (F.E.M.) (Facebook), a promising emerging band that in 2014 released an interesting full length debut album entitled Sulla bolla di sapone inspired by a science-fiction story by German writer Kurd Lasswitz (1848 – 1910).



About 55 km North-West from Milan lies VARESE, which in the seventies gave us Cincinnato and Hunka Munka. In Varese today we can listen to Court (Official Website), a band formed in 1990 by five skilled young musicians. In 2007 they won the Los Angeles Music Award as the best Alternative Artist with their third album Frost Of Watermelon, released ten years after Court’s previous work. Their “recipe” is tasty and well balanced, the band is not stuck in the past and you can find in this work not only echoes of Genesis and Pink Floyd but also some particular, “grungy” passages.




Other interesting bands from the province of Varese are Ske (MySpace), a side project of Yugen keyboardist Paolo “Ske” Botta” who in 2011 released an album titled 1000 autunni, then Atto IV (ReverbNation), Ego (MySpace), Delta (Official Website), Sirena (MySpace) and a hard-psychedelic band called Emmablu (MySpace). Almost half way between Milan and Varese there’s a little town called Cuggiono, birthplace of the Italian minstrel Angelo Branduardi (Official Website).




About 45 km north of Milan lies COMO, on the western arm of Lake Como. From here there comes the “prog chamber music” of Gatto Marte (Official Website), the symphonic prog of Mogador (Reverbnation) and Sarastro Blake (Facebook), interesting bands with many seventies influences, the folk-prog Trewa (Reverbnation) and the heavier Mysteria Noctis (Facebook). Como is not far from the border between Italy and Switzerland, so I think it’s worth taking the chance to cross the border and go up to LUGANO to find a “non Italian Italianprog band”, Aliperdute. It’s a pity that this band is not active at the moment, but luckily their music is still available in free legal download from the site cantine.org so take your time, relax for awhile, and listen (click here) .




On the other arm of Lake Como lies LECCO, the city where a famous novel by the Italian writer Alessandro Manzoni, I promessi sposi, is set. In the seventies Lecco gave us the “Christian prog” band Messaggio ‘73 and Biglietto per l’Inferno (Official Website). Biglietto per l’Inferno started their activity in 1972 and, until they split up at the end of 1975, they were a terrific band on stage. In 2007 on the initiative of original members Giuseppe “Pilly” Cossa (piano, accordion) and Mauro Gnecchi (drums, percussion) a new project called Biglietto per l’Inferno.folk was formed for some live performances featuring the old repertoire of the band and in 2009 a new album was released on the independent label BTF featuring new arrangements of the historic pieces, Tra l’assurdo e la ragione.


The original vocalist Claudio Canali retired from ordinary life and today he’s a monk of the Order of Saint Benedict, so the lead vocals are now provided by a female singer, Mariolina Sala. Anyway the old singer gave his blessing to the new project and “Fra’” Claudio appears as a special guest on two tracks of the album. Another original member of the band, Giuseppe “Baffo” Banfi, features as producer and helped the band in studio. I have to say that the new project is excellent, the new arrangements feature folk influences but respect the spirit of the old compositions and the result is a well crafted, balanced mix of fresh sounds and vintage suggestions. As in the past, the concerts are still the band’s pillar of strength and their performances attract many people, so old and young enthusiastic fans are pushing the band to go on. In fact, the new project is not a boring unplugged version of the old band but a lively act still able to stir emotions.


By the way, former bassist of Biglietto per l’Inferno, Fausto Branchini, takes no part in the new project but he has not given up music and is working on a rock opera under the name Fausto Branchini - Biglietto per l’Inferno. Other contemporary prog bands from Lecco, with a heavier sound influenced by metal, are Evil Wings (MySpace) whose vocalist and guitarist features also in the new line-up of Il Biglietto per l’Inferno.folk, Willow (Facebook), Leader Braun (MySpace), Drivhell (MySpace) and Dropshard (Official Website).