Import CD – NJ 022 – Ellipse – Stefano Travaglini

Description

伊カンポバッソ&ペーザロの音楽院でオーボエ/作曲/指揮の修士号を取得ののち、ハンガリー、オーストリア、スイス、ドイツ、オランダ、ロシア、スペイン、アラブ、米国、メキシコ、カナダ等でさまざまな音楽制作に携わってきたステーファノ・トラヴァリィーニが、オスロ/レインボー・スタジオで2016年に録音したピアノ・ソロ作品。
エンジニアはもちろん、Jan Erik Kongshaug氏。

Cat#:

LABEL: Edizioni Notami, Italy
CAT#: NJ 022
ARTIST: Stefano Travaglini
TITLE: Ellipse
EAN: 8054729510342

LINEUP:

Stefano Travaglini (piano)

Rec data:

Recorded in September 2016
At Rainbow Studio, Oslo
Engineer: Jan Erik Kongshaug

Tracks

  1. The Importance of Fishing
  2. Life
  3. The Flowering Season
  4. Persistence
  5. Monk’s Mood
  6. Presences
  7. Looking Back
  8. Intermezzo
  9. Softly, As in Morning Sunrise
  10. Goodbye, for Now (Meditation)

Album previews

Voices

Italy’s Stefano Travaglini—primarily a composer and pianist—is wildly diverse as an instrumentalist and composer. He has performed on oboe and bass guitar, studied with Estonian composer Arvo Part and American jazz and classical composer Vince Mendoza. Touring throughout four continents, Travaglini has demonstrated impressive proficiency in both jazz and classical genres though he is equally at home where categorizations aren’t easily applied. A case in point is his debut album The Hungarian Songbook (Terre Sommerse, 2013); a collection of Eastern European and Gipsy folksongs arranged for voice and improvised piano.

Ellipse is a solo piano collection, recorded spontaneously, without edits or modifications. It can be classified as free improvisation but—as on the opening “The Importance of Fishing”—abstraction and lyricism coexist nicely. The 1928 song “Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise” by Sigmund Romberg and Oscar Hammerstein II was originally composed as a dance piece, but in most of its many jazz forms, has been greatly modified. Travaglini’s interpretation is unique in its mix of staccato notes and nonlinear improvisation. “Monk’s Mood” is also covered as the first part of a medley with Travaglini’s own “Presences.” The pianist treats Thelonius Monk with due respect even while occasionally infusing the ballad rendition with a more aggressive attitude. “Looking Back” and the closing piece, “Good Bye, for Now” are beautifully expressive and more structured.

Travaglini improvises as if having previously immersed his mind in a written version of the same piece. On Ellipse, the spontaneous creations, the melodies and passages, all hang together as if part of a well-planned narrative. Since he quotes the zen-like philosophy of Lee Konitz with “That’s my way of preparation—to not be prepared” we can assume that the structures we hear are being developed in real time. Ellipse is a terrific solo piano recording; adventurous, but never over the top, and often quite beautiful. – By Karl Ackermann