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Joined: March 04 2008
Location: Retirement Home
Status: Offline
Points: 3658
Topic: Bededeum Posted: December 08 2011 at 16:29
The 'Bededeum Project' started officially on September 2nd 1997, due to an accidental encounter of some of the group's members at a concert of Vincenzo Zitello, a well-known Italian harpist. Apart from that occasion itself, what convinced us to begin this experience was the shared interest in folk music, especially from the 'anglo-celtic' area (Irish, Breton, English, Scottish etc.). In particular, groups such as Pentangle, Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span etc. have considerably influenced our musical taste, even if none of us had exclusively listened to folk music, but also to Rock music from the late sixties and early seventies, English and Italian progressive, American psychedelia, Canterbury music, Jazz, as well as the central characters of the great age of musical revolution in the years of the youth protest movements - from Jimi Hendrix to the frenzy of Daevid Allen's Gong, from the German 'kraut rock' of Can to Jethro Tull, from King Crimson to Genesis, and then Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and, most of all, our own Fabrizio De André...
I got in touch with the band and here is their story.
Your biography has been covered in your
ProgArchives profile so let's bypass the biography details. But which bands were
you influenced by and why did you choose that name ?
There's a story, belonging to the fable tradition of
our area, the Northern Tuscany, which tells about lost souls that every night go
down in procession towards the village of Miseglia, to haunt the dreams and the
minds of the living. The souls cross the dark streets, singing a strange litany
"... bededeum bededeum mena la m'nata...". Incomprehensible words that probably
derive from a corruption of the ancient popular Latin; so we thought that
Bededeum was the right name to emphasize the relationship between past and
present, history and imagination, memory and dream, which is the basis of our
musical project since its inception.
How is the local music scene in your area now ?
Is it easy for you to get any gigs ?
This is not a great moment for the italian music, especially in
provincial towns like ours. Few are the theaters or clubs where you can still
listen to live music and the growing economic crisis requires a certain
austerity to those who traditionally have invested in proposing musical culture,
like the local administration. Despite this, there are many attractive bands,
whose member are ofter very young, in the Italian underground music movement.
Perhaps the problem is an over-standardization of the music scene: probably it's
easier to run through well established and simply recognizable patterns rather
than gamble on experimentation and research. Plus, we must add the crisis of
records sales that afflicts the wobbly world of music. We think that who
continues to invest in music today, both in composition and production, is
honestly driven by a deep passion. And that's the way we see our collaboration
whit "La Locanda del Vento", the label that has produced our last album,
especially with Loris Furlan, a man who considers music a cultural treasure to
propose and support.
Over to your two albums. Please tell us more
about the Brevistele album from 2002.
"Brevistele" is the closing album of a cycle. It has been created to
collect all the different elements that characterized us until that moment. We
started as a popular music band, with particular reference to Anglo-Celtic music
and, more generally, ancient medieval music. For many years we have written and
presented our songs during historical re-enactment context. We pursued a long
research about local fable's tradition and all through our production, there are
several songs related to the Apuan popular culture. As time goes by we shifted
the attention to different visions, ideas and emotions, keeping the key features
in our way of conceiving music.
Then you had a six years long record break. What
happened during these six years ?
The period ended with the release of "Brevistele" has also led to a
mutation in the lineup. Over the next 6 years we have had several lineup
changes and we slowly laid the foundations for the new album. In the 2003
tourneé we share the stage with a theater company; we directed the musical
aspect of a story, set in the beginning of the last century, whose theme was the
difficult relation between man and work, especially the tragic situation of iron
mines and marble quarries workers. That experience was very helpful to define a
new path. We approach to music not as a product linked to recording industry. We
don't record anything if we don't feel what we're proposing. It must reflect us,
with our strengths and our faults, our limitations. We compose and play music
with passion, and we really like what we do. Just to be clear, we don't seek
sound or arrangement's perfection: our purpose is to feel the musical project as
a son. That's why it's been so long time between the first and second
album.
You returned in 2008 with the Oltre il Sipario
album. Please tell us more about this album.
Just like the first album, "Oltre il Sipario" represents the end of a
period of our story. In this work we liked to tell about human beings, in the
way we have seen them in so many life experiences, with literary and
cinematographic cross-references: weak in their miseries but with a the strong
desire not to be overcome by events dictated by fate, fortune, precise human
will, often prevaricating. Each track is designed as a black and white
photography, or a daguerreotype, in an old album of memories. Faces which are
showing important stories, but with no voice to tell. "Geordie" and "Le Voci di
Derry" were already part of our live repertory from "Brevistele". All the other
songs were composed or rearranged in the six years following the first album's
publication.
What is the lyrical topics in your songs ?
Topics covered in the texts of our songs are
just the effort to offer a voice to those stories we were talking about before,
both in the last and previous album. Telling people, in their wealth and their
tragedy, just like characters of a comedy that somehow want to present
themselves and we offered a stage. So we told the story of those who have lost
their lives at work, trying to earn their daily bread, the story of a soldier in
the French front line in World War I, or a woman forced to cross the ocean to
fight poverty. Sad stories, of course, but, at last, reveal the precise will to
face life with passion and determination, often at the cost of making the
supreme sacrifice. As the story of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, two
Italian anarchists, wrongly accused of homicide and murdered in the electric
chair in America in 1927, to whose memory we have dedicated the album.
For those of us unfamiliar with your music; how
would you describe you music and which bands would you compare yourself with ?
It's not easy to give specific definition of our music, also due to the
latest developments in compositional. For what that concerns live performances,
we've often played combining music and theater, arranging songs in a uncommon
style compared with folk music, genre to which we belong. Once, answering to a
question about the kind of music we propose, we said that our was a
"psycho-anarchist-inter-ethnic-apuan-folk". It was a joke, obviously, and today
we only say that we play acoustic music, not necessarily bound to a specific
genre. It depends on what we listen. Even if we don't follow a single musical
pattern, many are the bands representing, directly or not, our musical
background: King Crimson, Jethro Tull, Strawbs, Pentangle, Third Ear Band,
Steeleye Span, Comus, Gentle Giant, Gong, Faust, Can, Lena Willemark, Leo Ferrè
and Fabrizio De André. So, we love playing and listening to music, some of us
have shows on the radio, and this necessarily has consequences in our own way of
composing music.
What have you been up to since the release of
the Oltre il Siparioalbum three
years ago, what is your current status and what are your plans for this year and
beyond ?
After the second studio album's release,
there were changes in the lineup, as occurred after the release of "Brevistele":
first step was the permanent entry of a string trio, viola, violin and cello who
replaced the bagpipes and flutes during the concerts. That has been a great
experience because it allowed us to try out new solutions. After a period of ups
and downs, now we're setting a new formation once again: string trio has been
reduced to violin and viola and we have also introduced a "jazz-style" drums,
trying not to deform the whole project's sound. Musically, we're looking for new
arrangements, acoustic testing much closer to progressive music. As we like to
say, a "Progressive Steam". We hope to start a new tour in the beginning of
2012. Now we're working on the repertoire and on new adaptations of old songs.
We will record our third work at the right moment.
To wrap up this interview, is there anything you
want to add to this interview ?
Like any human sharing experience, during all
these years, the Bededeum project has had many moments of difficulty and of
suffering growth. We never tried to be successful neither to gain public
consent. What allowed us to overcome all difficulties, while continuing to
compose songs and to play together, was the desire to tell stories, through our
music and visions. We play because we like it and we're going to do it as we
continue to share this passion. The future is in our feet and in our finger's
tips.
Thank you to the band for this interview
Their PA profile is here and their homepage is here
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