20 years ago, British pianist Tommy Scott emerged onto the jazz scene as a teenage prodigy, championed by the likes of Joey Calderazzo and Danilo Perez and described as “astonishing” by Jazz Review.
Heavily influenced by the style and energy of Herbie Hancock, McCoy Tyner & Kenny Kirkland, he returns with a brand new trio project, featuring double bassist Yuri Goloubev and drummer Asaf Sirkis.
The idea of a new project around the literature of Italo Calvino originated from an invitation by Maestro Enrico Intra and Maurizio Franco to the MIT Jazz Festival at the Piccolo Teatro in Milan in November 2019. This is, however, not my first encounter with Calvino, as in 2004 I had already composed the music for a performance inspired by “Le città invisibili", one of the cult books of 20th century literature. Actually, my relationship with Calvino has much deeper and far-reaching roots, shared during the 70s with many 'young people' belonging to my generation. This was the period when the writer published “Il Castello dei destini incrociati” (The Castle of the Crossed Destinies), the book of short stories that inspired this new work of mine.
A period characterized by its many contradictions, but also an extremely creative, fertile and transformative one from a social, political and cultural point of view. In books and music, one can find immediate, multifarious, succinct and, at the same time, profound answers. In his stories, Calvino expresses a methodological and philosophical attitude that strips away the non-essential, leaving only its fundamental dimensions: mind, space and time. It is the literary transposition of the widely shared concepts of the 70s: in particular, Mies van der Rohe's "less is more" in architecture, and, in my opinion, the aesthetics of several jazz representatives, first and foremost Thelonious Monk and Duke.
Calvino is all this and so much more. He does it with lightness, irony, rigour and a somewhat “classical” mastery of writing. It is the period of combinatorial writing, a new way of “doing” literature, through technicalities that are openly stated and disclosed to readers, who become active players in the feat of literary composition. In “Il Castello dei destini incrociati”, Calvino's first work written entirely using this literary technique, the stories of the different characters who happen to meet in a castle after a series of ordeals, are constructed according to the combination of 15th-century miniature tarot cards (tarocchi). The cards are the same but the stories they tell are all different.
In this way, Calvino tells of Orlando, driven insane by love, or of Astolfo, who goes to the moon to regain Orlando's wits, and again of alchemists, lovers and ramshackle knights. Characters apparently connected by a common medieval-renaissance setting, and yet, on closer analysis, estranged from time and space and, for this reason, extremely contemporary.
Within this ambitious methodological research, I discovered a connection with the language of music. Music is, in fact, the art of combining sounds with silence. This combinatory practice is applied through written, oral or 'audio-tactile' norms and processes. The history and musicological studies of Western and non-Western music have introduced us to many of them: from modality to tonality, from seriality to polytonality, and so on, including techniques adopted by other continents.
"Jazz is not a what, jazz is a how”, as the great pianist Bill Evans used to say when asked to define jazz. Using just a few words, Evans sums up its essence, that is, the way in which this music is able to be pluralistic and unique at the same time, embracing a multiplicity of cultural influences and processing them through its own aesthetics. Composition is undoubtedly one of the distinctive traits of jazz, meant both in "slow" terms in which the composer can rethink, modify and rewrite the music, and in terms of "fast," real-time composition: in other words, improvisation. These reflections provided me with further common ground with Calvino's work and techniques. Moreover, in the concluding notes of “Il Castello dei destini incrociati”, the writer reveals the open-ended and evolving nature of the book, which remains, in some ways, poised and unfinished. In fact, the text was to contain a third contemporary part based on the same narrative structure.
The idea was therefore to take up the challenge of devising new stories through the language of sounds and to accomplish that unfinished third part through musical storytelling. The characters and places portrayed by Calvino are transformed here by the combination of the twelve sounds both in the written part as well as in the one improvised by the seven musicians involved - eight with Gabriele Comeglio featuring on one track. In addition to the sixteen stories that make up “Il Castello dei destini incrociati”, eight for each part, I composed another eight following an entirely subjective criterion, leaving space to the creative stimuli contained in the book. As Calvino states: "I concentrated primarily on observing the tarot cards attentively, with the eye of he who does not know what they are, and on drawing suggestions and associations from them, interpreting them according to an imaginary iconology".
I therefore composed a counterpoint, assigning it to the different instruments representing, for their sonorous features, specific characters: the violin, the flute, the (distorted) electric guitar, the voice, the piano, the (electric) bass, the percussion.
The specularity of the story is rendered instead by two twelve-tone series. I was however not completely satisfied with the outcome. It was too intellectual and not communicative enough. I therefore worked on the inner harmonisation of the voices to bring tensions and dissonances into yet another territory, halfway between the affirmation and the denial of the key. Was this again the duality suggested by Calvino?
There was then the rhythmic and timbral aspect that brought the music elsewhere, beyond the variables of improvisation and the action-reaction of the musicians with respect to the written stimuli. It was a pretty creative mishmash where creativity and intricacy were growing hand in hand. Enjoy listening. Claudio Angeleri
Watanabe Norio is a jazz guitarist based in Nagoya Japan. His high skill of playing music makes it more colorful and affect impress vibrate. He seldom play improvised music, but today we play quite beautiful improvised music together.
Recorded in 1996 at the week long residency at Sweet Basils celebrating the release of Marc Cary's Listen. Also celebrating the birthdays of Dion Parson and Dwayne Burno
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