Showing posts with label Francesco Cusa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Francesco Cusa. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Francesco Cusa & The Assassins meets Duccio Bertini - Black Poker (CLEAN FEED RECORDS 2018)


Here is a record of crossed challenges. A band (The Assassins) with a vocation to improvise freely is co-operating with a classical chamber string ensemble (Florence Art Quartet) specialized in the interpretation of written compositions, determining a very special way to combine two different musical worlds. Drummer Francesco Cusa assumed that task as a composer and an improviser and asked for an experienced partner in order to establish the necessary arrangements and applied strategies, someone who works either with jazz big bands and symphonic orchestras, Duccio Bertini. Italian creative jazz may not be widely known outside of its frontiers, but considering what “Black Poker” show us, we wonder why this happens. The music is organized by parallel planes and these frequently imply the gradual re-composition of the original ideas, in a constant renewal and adaptation of all the parameters. Always searching for the best combination of what comes from the two quartets, without “jazzifying” the strings or turning classical the jazz combo, what you find here is pure gold. That something which defines a good poker player «who deals with hazard and parsimony», to use Cusa’s own words.


The Assassins:
Giulio Stermieri  hammond, piano
Flavio Zanuttini  trumpet, electronics
Giovanni Benvenuti  tenor sax

Florence Art Quartet:
Daniele Iannaccone  violin
Lorenzo Borneo  violin
Agostino Mattioni  viola
Cristiano Sacchi  cello
Duccio Bertini  keyboards (on “Elegia”)

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Altomaria - Disco Infermo (FITZCARRALDO RECORDS 2018)


Altomaria is an historical sicilian-based band active since 2000 a.d. who reunites some of the best Jazz players from the three corners of Sicily island. Featuring the obliquous bassist Luca Lo Bianco and sax veteran Gianni Gebbia, from Palermo, master of rhytms Francesco Cusa from Catania and the trombone wizard Tony Cattano from Syracuse area. 

Serious fun. Steve colemanish plus minguslike and funkadelics grooves in a solid musical 'Cosa Nostra' band.


1. Malo Inno 08:22
2. S.C. 08:09
3. Bluemingus 05:01
4. Zero in geometria 05:05
5. Bowin' in the wind 02:47
6. You go! I go? 07:29
7. Taranzurka 03:16
8. Disco Infermo 03:57

G i a n n i  G e b b i a ✪ alto Saxophone
T o n y  C a t t a n o ✾ trombone
L u c a  L o B i a n c o ⚒︎ acoustic bass
F r a n c e s c o  C u s a ⚧ drums

All compositions by Altomaria except n.4 by G. Gebbia
Recorded live at Lab Music Studio - Palermo 2003
Sound engineer Antonio Zarcone
Produced by Luca Lo Bianco and Gianni Gebbia
Graphic design Luca Lo Bianco
Samples on N.4 and N.5 Giovanni Verga
Published by Fitzcarraldo Records in colabeling with Objet-a

Monday, November 27, 2017

Francesco Cusa Trio Meets Carlo Atti - From Sun Ra to Donald Trump (CLEAN FEED RECORDS 2017)



With the kind of humouristic approach characteristic of all things Italian, drummer Francesco Cusa turned the band he founded to play jazz standards into a project dealing, through his original compositions and orchestrations, with the search of the existing possibilities to «re-evoke an epoch and transpose it into the contemporary». And here are the first consequences, maintaining the «identity process» of the «fervid creative moment in black culture» which was defined 50 years ago by Sun Ra. For this endeavour, he invited Carlo Atti, a tenor saxophonist with an acclaimed career in the mainstream of Italian jazz. The music is less funny, or crazy, than the titles of the pieces suggest (for instance: “Fiscal Regime in the Life of a New York Taxidriver-Jazzman” or “Keynes and the Macro-Theory of the Structural Implosion of the Standard”), but the FCT Trio and their guest manage to surprise us, subverting the most obvious aspects of the standard jazz format (or the fake of it, because there’s no “real book” on sight). There’s an overall idea that music can change what nowadays is politically, socially and economically wrong, backing off to more happy days, but if the concept is debatable, because of the nostalgic element and because it gives to much responsability to the art of sounds, the result is a marvelous record. In this case only, the means amply justify the purposes.

1 Adam Smith Counts Every Penny (feat. Carlo Atti) 10:58
2 Economic Boom and Stasis in the Capitalistic Illusion (feat. Carlo Atti) 15:55
3 Deficit in the Economies of the Black Jazzman in the 'Sixties (feat. Carlo Atti) 5:53
4 Delivering a Load of Musical Boxes to Wall Street (feat. Carlo Atti) 8:20
5 Fiscal Regime in the Life of the New York Taxidriver–jazzman (feat. Carlo Atti) 8:29
6 Keynes and the Macro-Theory of the Structural Implosion of the Standard (feat. Carlo Atti) 5:27
7 Sun Ra vs Donald Trump (Wrestling Bout, Refereed by Roland Barthes) [feat. Carlo Atti] 11:09
8 Accelerating: From the Global Society to the Foamed Society (feat. Carlo Atti) 5:55

Carlo Atti  tenor sax
Simone Graziano  piano
Gabriele Evangelista  bass
Francesco Cusa  drums

Gianni Lenoci / Francesco Cusa - Wet Cats (AMIRANI RECORDS 2017)



Stunning interplay, sound consciousness, colour palette of the richest kind. A musical exploration driven through expressive depths, textures delights and complex pixeling sparks, by two cutting edge musicians who really master their instruments in the most flexible way without losing a solid, bodied sound. Lenoci and Cusa, already bold presences on Amirani catalogue, really play a pregnant interaction on this Wet Cats album where everything moves fluidly through eccentric creative circles of inspired music. Don’t miss it!


Ultimissimo titolo Amirani pubblicato in catalogo (siamo al numero 52), “We Cats” sancisce l’incontro al vertice tra Gianni Lenoci (piano, anche preparato, e flauto in legno) e Francesco Cusa(batteria).

Il musicista pugliese e quello siciliano hanno in verità background piuttosto dissimili ma in questa registrazione effettuata in studio a Monopoli si concedono l’uno all’altro al meglio delle loro capacità, conseguendo in modo facile ed esemplare un risultato finale degno di applausi. Qui il loro dialogo prende forma in un unico brano improvvisato per cinquantuno minuti di musica avvincente e proteiforme.

La coppia parte in sordina, in modo circospetto, attendendo una scintilla creativa che non tarda ad arrivare. Cusa stuzzica nervosamente i piatti mentre Lenoci agisce tra tastiera e cordiera. Dopo il sesto minuto i due sono già a bordo, nella cabina di comando di un aeroplano che lentamente decolla tra accordi pieni, acciaccature, sfregamenti, note percussive e sbattimenti ritmici. Raggiunta una certa quota il volo resta orizzontalmente sospeso nel vuoto, cullato da una lieve inerzia microtonale.

D’improvviso, al quindicesimo minuto, si affronta una moderata perturbazione atmosferica generata dal frenetico sovrapporsi timbrico e ritmico dei rispettivi strumenti. Un paio di minuti dopo torna la quiete. L’atmosfera è tersa, neoclassicamente rarefatta. Arriva quindi un pindarico crescendo di piano accompagnato da un intenso rollio percussivo. Il velivolo prende velocità ma segue una rotta folle e irregolare, rischiando a tratti di precipitare. I due piloti se ne accorgono e riprendono il controllo sui tempi pressanti di moderne variazioni impro-jazz.

Dopo il trentesimo minuto spengono inspiegabilmente i motori, facendo vibrare il suono con labili rintocchi. Il viaggio riprende su motivi prima ripetitivi e poi istericamente sconnessi. La tastiera di Lenoci arde note su note, la batteria di Cusa accelera la loro combustione. 

Al quarantacinquesimo la conversazione diventa concitata, il velivolo risale in quota un’ultima volta. Il viaggio però volge al termine, la meta è all’orizzonte. Si plana e atterra dolcemente, cullati dall’infantile e impercettibile soffio del flauto. File under: impro aerodinamica. Sound Contest / Olindo Fortino

1 Wet Cats 51:36