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ZAAL

Jazz Rock/Fusion • Italy


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Zaal biography
Best known for being the keyboardist in LA MASCHERA DI CERA, but mostly being a very versatile musician/composer who happens to be involved in several groups, Agostino MACOR founded ZAAL in 2002 as a jazz-prog project. Joining forces with a host of musicians that filled duties on violin, bass/cello/contrabass and drums, plus some guests, MACOR managed to deliver a delicately colorful type of progressive-oriented jazz-rock, highly melodic and yet mysterious. The fluid incorporation of elements from symphonic prog, space-rock and chamber-rock gives the overall sound a rich set of atmospheres; simultaneously, the old school jazz factor helps the band to keep things lyrical. This is, in a nutshell, what you find in their album "La Lama Sottile", released in 2004. ZAAL is clearly influenced by PERIGEO and ARTI E MESTIERI, with some hints to the Canterbury trend (in a more stylish manner) and WEATHER REPORT. The predominantly constructed nature of the compositions makes it easy to include symphonic layers and spacey textures without breaking the music's natural stride: this is when the links to FINISTERRE and PFM make themselves more obvious.



Why this artist must be listed in www.progarchives.com :
Preferentially recommended to lovers of jazz-prog, ZAAL will also appeal to fans of melodic progressive rock in general (including symphonic prog fans who usually don't feel attracted by the jazzy side of prog).



Discography:
La Lama Sottile, studio album (2004)

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ZAAL discography


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ZAAL top albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

3.74 | 24 ratings
La Lama Sottile
2004
3.66 | 16 ratings
Onda Quadra
2010
4.00 | 8 ratings
Homo Habilis
2020

ZAAL Live Albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

ZAAL Videos (DVD, Blu-ray, VHS etc)

ZAAL Boxset & Compilations (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

ZAAL Official Singles, EPs, Fan Club & Promo (CD, EP/LP, MC, Digital Media Download)

ZAAL Reviews


Showing last 10 reviews only
 Onda Quadra by ZAAL album cover Studio Album, 2010
3.66 | 16 ratings

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Onda Quadra
Zaal Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by TenYearsAfter

3 stars This album is a project by Agostino Macor, the keyboard player of the acclaimed Italian progrock band La Maschera Di Cera, and also Finisterre, LaZona en Rohmer. It is his second album (after La Lama Sottile from 2004), according to the info from the record company fans of La Maschera Di Cera and Finisterre will be very pleased. Well, to be honest, I don't think so! In contrary, this album sounds not in the vein of abevementioned bands, it's way more varied and experimental.

Remarkably are the huge contrasts in the music.

Short hypnotizing sound collages in Antefatto, Contare, Cherchio and Reveil.

Swinging rhythms with a captivating and vivid interaction between the keyboards, drums and brass in the strong track Quinto Palindromo (a mix of latin and jazz) and Dyane 6 (fluent Fender piano solo).

And experimental parts with a wide range of sounds from the trumpet, percussion and varied keyboards (especially the distinctive Fender Rhodes electric piano, along lots of brass).

To me Onda Quadra sounds as very adventurous and varied, with outstanding musicians. But this blend of jazz, avant- garde, electronic and fusion is far from the symphonic rock by La Maschera Di Cera and Finisterre. However, thumbs up for Agostino Macor with his Zaal project for his daring and creative album!

My rating: 3,5 star.

 La Lama Sottile by ZAAL album cover Studio Album, 2004
3.74 | 24 ratings

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La Lama Sottile
Zaal Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by apps79
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

3 stars Zaal was an idea of Italian keyboardist Agostino Macor,major member of La Maschera Di Cera but also part of other Zuffanti projects like Hostsonaten,Finisterre and Rohmer.He created this project in 2002 and collaborated with many musicians,with whom he shared previous recording experiences like drummer Federico Foglia from Hostsonaten, guitarist Stefano Marelli from Finisterre,Hostsonaten and Rohmer and violin player Sergio Caputo from Hostsonaten and Finisterre.The debut ''La lama sottile'' was recorded in 2003 and released a year later on Mellow Records.

The approach of Macor on this band is definitely in a Jazz Rock vein but with obvious elements from Classical and Chamber music as well.The sound is refined and very elegant and the compositions are mainly delicate and smooth with external light interplays between the instruments.On ''La lama sottile'' you can listen to a jazzy rhythm section combining with classical piano,you can listen to fiery violin solos outbursting over symphonic synths,you can listen to DIXIE DREGS-like groovy tracks ,you can listen to Chamber music with strong cello,you can even listen to calm Lounge Jazz with smooth piano and saxes like if you are in a restaurant.Guitars are mostly absent,but their appearance adds an even more melodic content when needed.Macor prooves that way to be a very good composer and an underestimated excellent keyboard/piano player.

''La lama sottile'' is something different among the tons of Jazz Rock releases out there.It contains a heavy melodic aura and an overall pleasant and optimistic sound,but the lack of some dynamics might annoy some demanding adventurous prog followers.An album easily listened by the mass of both prog and non-prog fans.Strongly recommended...3.5 stars.

 La Lama Sottile by ZAAL album cover Studio Album, 2004
3.74 | 24 ratings

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La Lama Sottile
Zaal Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by Mellotron Storm
Prog Reviewer

3 stars ZAAL is the project of Agostino Macor the keyboardist for LA MASCHERA DI CERA, FINISTERE and other bands that his side kick Fabio Zuffanti seems to be involved with. ZAAL is more in the Jazz / Fusion realm of things with lots of violin. PERIGIO did come to mind a couple of times with some of the better music here but this doesn't measure up in my opinion to that band.

"Intro" is a short piece with a light beat and piano. "Zelig" is uptempo with piano and light drums.Violin joins in. A calm a minute in then it slowly picks back up. Another calm 3 1/2 minutes in with piano then it picks up again before 5 1/2 minutes with synths and violin as drums and piano continue. Mellotron before 7 1/2 minutes makes this sound much better. "La Bussola" is a short violin led piece. It's mellow like the "Intro" track. "Il Destino Di Naghia Sofia" is my favourite track. It opens with electric piano (thankyou) then violin and light drums join in. It picks up a little.This is good. Synths before 7 minutes. "La Lama" is a short piano piece.

"Progress" opens with bass and violin.The tempo picks up with violin out front. It settles as contrasts continue throughout. Some refreshing guitar after 3 1/2 minutes but it's too brief. "Naan" opens with piano, drums and sax. This is jazzy. You can hear people talking in the background which is odd. Clapping ends it. "Il Cannocchiale" is a song I like but it seems completely out of place. Atmosphere throughout with female and male spoken words coming and going. "Cinquequarti" has these spoken female words with a jazzy soundscape. Piano and violin lead. "Limbo" features violin and sparse piano. "Sul Mutamento" opens with thunder and rain as piano joins in. It all stops abrubtly then turns jazzy after a minute. Violin leads a minute later but the piano and violin keep trading off. Cool song. The thunder and rain are back after 5 1/2 minutes then the song kicks back in.

If you like lighter Jazz and violin i'm sure you will enjoy this album. It has it's moments but not near enough of them to offer up 4 stars.

 Onda Quadra by ZAAL album cover Studio Album, 2010
3.66 | 16 ratings

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Onda Quadra
Zaal Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by Cesar Inca
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

4 stars Agostino Macor continues to explore, elaborate and develop his jazz-prog vision in thsi vehicle named Zaal. "Onda Quadra" is an excellent successor to the debut album "La Lama Sottile" (which included his friend and also progressive workaholic Fabio Zuffanti as a special guest). Now, with a massively modified line-up, Macor & co. instill bigger dosis of stamian to the fusion elements within the refurbished sound of the band, which implies that they have taken good advantage of the rhythmic trio (drummer, bassist and percussionist). On the other hand, the level of nu-jazz atmospheres remains quite solid, even becoming more recurrent, while the ambient thing has receded a bit. In a few words, the band has managed to keep a musical axis intact without quitting the need to renew the musical purpose, and so the listener can get the impression that they are already familiar with the basic foundations of the Zaal's style but the album in itself is far from comfortably cloning teh debut release. Going to the repertoire itself, the 1 1/2 minute long prologue 'Antefatto' displays a mood of minimalistic expectation before the polished vigor of 'Quinto Palindromo' delivers a lovely exercise in fusion a 5/4 tempo: I find this track quite inspirational from Weather Report and pre-Connors Return To Forever. The percussion is quite vital to sustain the overall swing, while the sax and the trumpet deliver magical phrases as if the notes were pencils and not actual sounds. Right beofre the 4-minute frontier, a languid passage delivers a moment of introspective psychedelia, almost like a sad scene from a David Lynch movie. Once the central fusion motif returns, it does so with a vengeance, bearing an augmented intensity that fgoes all the way until the climax finalizes. Things have really started in an exciting way. 'Contare In Cerchio' sounds almost like a homage to the intro of the Crinsomian classic 'Exiles', an abstract musical journey that does not anticipate the soft, velvety warmth of 'Dyane 6', once again, prog-fusio at its best. This has to be one of the most moving compositions in any of the two Zaal recordings. Well, the next track is 'Reveil (In The Capsule)': the intro theme is quite cosmic, and then the main body delivers a nu-jazz ambience filled with tranquil nostalgia and a soft sense of constrained joy. 'ZLG Reprise' t firs tseems aimed at a continuation of the preceding track's mood, but soon it turns more extroverted and vivid, not unlike 'Quinto Palindromo' or 'Dyane 6', only this time the band generates a more ambitious melodic construction. This piece is so patently colorful that one cannot point at a particular climatic moment that stands out above others, not even its contagious final section. This is why it makes sense that 'Epilogo' should close down thsi album with its minimalistic atmopsheres and cosmic airs. This track sounds like a hybrid of Tortoise and mid-70s Tangerine Dream, and indeed it wouldn't have been out of place as part of Rohmer's namesake album (yet another project involving Macor and Zuffanti). This is a great album, indeed, a musical jewel waiting to be purchaed and enjoyed by any lover of prog music with a jazzy twist, or contemporary fusion, or just experimental modern music that is more sugfestive than strident. Zaal rules!
 La Lama Sottile by ZAAL album cover Studio Album, 2004
3.74 | 24 ratings

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La Lama Sottile
Zaal Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by Cesar Inca
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

4 stars Zaal is a Project whose main focus is to provide a scenario for those Agostino Macor's ideas related to his jazz-oriented concerns. Even if the passages in which the violin takes center stage are abundant, it is clear that the keyboard input is the pillar of the instrumental interactions. 'La Lama Sottile' is a beautiful musical work, beautiful and warm like a subtle flame: the elegance is patently all over the place; the display of virtuosity is orchestrated in a frame of clever constraint; the consistently polished sound is a pure manifestation of the candidness aura to the compositions. Just to reiterate the previous notion with different and fewer words, this album's repertoire is a perfect sample of how a source of musical energy can be refurbished under the strict guidance of elegance in an effective way. 'Intro' is the obvious intro, a less-than-1-minute long, soft entrance lead by a Latin-friendly piano. 'Zelig' is the first showcase for the more explicit side of Zaal's core sound: stylish jazz-fusion with a strong chamber component and a few bucolic hints, revolving around the elaboration of diverse mood from a few basic motifs - something like Perigeo-meets-early PFM with some ounces of Celeste and Luciano Basso. Sergio Caputo's violin is simply celestial, while the mellotron and synthesizer adornments provide a special cosmic aura to the track. The lovely, subtly dense ambience briefly provided by the string ensemble in the interlude 'La Bussola' is followed by the very jazzy 'Il Destino di Naghia Sofia', which can be best described as Perigeo-meets-Weather Report with Jean-Luc Ponty replacing Wayne Shorter. There is a recurrent elemental basis for this 9'33"-long piece, but the mood is never monotonous: at some point, the synthesizer adds some psychedelic leads with enough softness as not to break the track's overall vibe. 'La Lama' is a piano sonata that displays a clever set of silent spots. This sort of quietness serves as an adequate anticipation for the glorious majesty of 'Progress', which actually happens to be more symphonic than jazzy. The guitar leads provided by guest Stefano Marelli bring a mesmerizing Gilmouresque detail to the magnificent whole. This piece is segued into 'Naan', a nostalgic track that seems to evoke the days of Dave Brubeck - featuring guest saxophonist Paolo Pezzi. 'Il Cannocchiale' is based on synth and guitar soundscapes, something like Fripp-meets-mid 70s Cluster. 'Cinquequarti', as the title indicates, is a 5/4 piece that reiterates the mood we already found on track 4. The same approach will be reflected in the closing track 'Sul Mutamento', only on a solid 4/4, with a funky-based dynamics and an interesting classical piano shift near the end and a coda that reprises the main motif of 'Zelig'. Minimalistic and spacey like 'Il Cannocchiale', albeit calmer, it brings almost 3 minutes of cosmic serenity before the arrival of the closing track. The listener may pick their own chosen highlights from "La Lama Sottile": mine are tracks 2 & 6, but the main idea is that "La Lama Sottile", as a whole, works perfectly. Zaal, as a band, masters the concept of designing and recording an album as an album per se, in the strictest sense of the word.
 La Lama Sottile by ZAAL album cover Studio Album, 2004
3.74 | 24 ratings

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La Lama Sottile
Zaal Jazz Rock/Fusion

Review by tszirmay
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

5 stars Zaal is an extraordinary recording from talented composer Agostino Macor, the brilliant keyboardist of Finisterre, Hostsonaten and La Maschera di Cera renown. Surrounded by some of his usual colleagues as well as a few new guys, the crafty composer suggests a jazzier side to his usual heavy symphonic gig with weighty use of the grand piano. When a progressive disc starts off with a 51 second intro with some superlative ivory work, you know this is going to be joyride. The 8 minute plus "Zelig" is a stunning work with intense cello and supple violin fillets on a bed of lush mellotron and sweet synthesizer, another dash of tangy piano, the prolific Fabio Zuffanti on bass and some wonderfully ornate drum work from Federico Foglia as sides. On the masterful epic "Il Destino di Haghia Sofia", Macor shoves this straight into pure jazz confines with liberal use of Fender Rhodes , tagging along with some highly Pontyesque violin forays from Sergio Caputo, some exemplary furrowing bass by Maurizio Bavastro as well as Foglia 's relentless work. "La Lama" is a minute long reflective piano etude that breathes and pants, a stellar example of passionate restraint. The next track is called "Progress", pfff what a title! The mood goes head first into some seriously experimental symphonic Prog with strings ablaze, a hint of harpsichord, ornately buzzing synths as well as Finisterre's soaring Stefano Marelli on lead guitar (is he good or what?) all tossed into the melee, a musical antipasto adding bursts of saxophone to provide some "piccante". This final supreme instrument is the showcase on "Naan", a vibrant follow-up to the previous madness, a meanderingly sexy solo courtesy of Paolo Pezzi that has a cool, relaxed authority about it that just exudes class. Aaah! What, I dialed a wrong number? Well, this is a recording after all and "Il Cannocchiale" is a Macor Fender Rhodes and a Marelli e-bow guitar theatrical duet with French and then German spoken word samples. Hey, Robert, Stefano can "tronic" too! Simply brilliant stuff, constantly in search of the edge. "Cinquequarti" smartly revisits the jazz quartet pattern with Bavastro's bopping bass foraging assuredly, Caputo's catskin caressing the violin strings with sheer impunity and Macor weaving some additional piano magic. Blending briefly into the mellotron infested "Limbo". The final piece is "Sul Mutamento", a classy 7.23 minute epic that showcases all the combined talent amassed by Macor and his "amici", a keyboard fest with piano, Rhodes, Wurlitzer, Mellotron and synthesizer all taking a bow in the spotlight. Caputo takes a little violent ride with later Marelli going for a mellow exit. Though most probably a one-shot "solo" album that is miles away from his normal style, Agostino Macor certainly has a side project that is most worthy of pursuing. Certainly hard to resist for fans of ISP and for those discerning proggers who like a little class with their music. Beautiful gray/blue slate modern graphics add to the pleasure. 5 Rhodes.
Thanks to Cesar Inca for the artist addition.

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