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SEGNO D'ACQUAOloferneProg Folk3.50 | 2 ratings |
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![]() The opener 'L'argonauta' (The Argonaut) is a kind of musical travelogue on the wings of poetry, full of toasts and fragrances, where echoes of Latin America are mixed with a suggestive Mittel-European flavour, an electric tango featuring Gypsy violin counterpoints... The following track 'Volver' (Back) is in the same vein and features a lively rhythm and swirling flute passages... 'I run away and I'm distracted by voices coming from the south... Don't be afraid, fight with the wind if it wears you out...'. Next comes 'L'amore della salamandra' (The love of the salamander), a piece full of sensuality where the sexual act is celebrated like an old ancestral ritual by a beautiful witch... 'It's two minutes to 3 a.m. / I've already set everything for you and me / There's a fertile moon, salamanders are breeding / Hot stuff is running into the veins...'. 'La Piedra del Paran' (The stone from Paran') is another good track. It begins softly and the mood is dreamy, then violin and flute lead to a lively dance where dreams can sail across the ocean and you can breath the clouds while melancholy and whispers flow away... 'When my body will become of water / Death will die and I'll be the stone of Paran'...'. 'La preghiera del marinaio' (The sailor's prayer) and 'A largo di Punta Stilo' (Off Punta Stilo) are linked together and form a mini suite about a naval accident that happened on March 22, 1965 near Punta Stilo, on the sea off the coast of Calabria. During a military exercise two ships of the Italian navy, the frigate Castore and another ship named Etna (like the volcano), collided and four sailors died. This piece is dedicated to the victims: Aristide Duse, Vittorio Celli, Domenico Franzese and Franco Pardini... 'What's up? What are these waves? Where is Aristide? / It's the end, I'm drowning, it's night... Domenico is not with me / The water is coming in too fast / Virgin Mary, help me!...'. There's surprise but soon the rage against an incompetent captain takes over, there's anguish and fear... 'Captain, my captain, where are you? Maybe you're already sleeping below deck / I hope that the sea will cover you as well... In a moment I understood how salted is the sea / It's the mirror of those stars that you won't see upon me...'. 'Controcanto' (Counter-singing) is a powerful ballad challenging the fate and the wind with its strong melodic lines... It's about a song that soars against the wind in a warm night where the heart is open and makes you feel master of your destiny... 'You look for the moon... You look for the fortune / But the wheel is spinning fast and it will never stop...'. 'Byzantium' and 'Oggi i pensieri sono alberi' (Today the thoughts are trees) form another mini suite. It begins by slow and hypnotic bass lines while evocative sounds in the background draw a mysterious Oriental atmosphere... 'Today the thoughts are like trees / Thanks to the sun there's more shade for me / I seem free among my Britons dreams / But from trunks to obstacles the step is short...'. Then rhythm takes off and thoughts become flying leaves, voices of a choir that mixed together are going out of tune... 'Please do not sing, leave me alone...'. This track features the jazz-musician Leonardo Sbaffi as a special guest on saxophone who adds a touch of colour. 'Fa# come Fard' (F# as blush) is a lively ballad that was already present on Oloferne's debut album. Here we find a new arrangement with violin and flute in the forefront... 'If the hell does exist / It's just an impression or a moment...'. Last track 'Il segno d'acqua' (Water sign) is another beautiful acoustic ballad. It's about the wish to set off on a journey across the sea running after the dreams. But this wish is counter-balanced by the fear of the waves... 'My tattooed anchors are sinking into the wine / Today I missed one more time the train leading to my destiny...'. After a pause appears, as a ghost track, a short recitative passage, a tribute to Hermann Melville's novel 'Moby Dick' that concludes this album dedicated to water. Well, on the whole this is a very good work!
andrea |
4/5 |
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