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Joined: March 04 2008
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Topic: Yugen Posted: December 21 2010 at 02:57
Yugen is a very interesting avant-garde band from Italy. Their new album Iridule is high on many ProgArchives staff members top ten list of 2010. I got in touch with the band for their story.
Why did you chose
avant-garde music as your musical expression and which bands were you
influenced by ?
FZ:
When I and Marcello Marinone started the project in 2005, my
interests in music were specifically oriented to contemporary music.
I had been studying chamber music since 1998, and I was writing some
music in this direction. When we considered the possibility to
“merge” the complex language of contemporary chamber music with
the powerful sound of avant-rock, Yugen was born. Personally I tried
to “close myself in a room” in order to avoid explicit
influences, even if some are quite clear: in Labirinto
d’acqua you can find Erik Satie, John
Cage, Bartok, Stravinskij. But also King Crimson and Gentle Giant. In
Iridule,
Ligeti, Nancarrow and Xenakis are the most important references.
Was
and is there an avant-garde/RIO scene in your area and were you a
part of this scene ?
Marcello Marinone:
Well, in Italy we can’t talk about a real “avant-garde/RIO
scene”. Yugen is a sort of “rara avis”. The problem here is
that “music” is exclusively pop, dance music or cover bands (or
very popular classical music). There’s no space for research,
experimentation; just entertainment. Going on with Yugen and AltrOck
label is our way to make “opposition” to this sad situation.
Over
to your albums. Please tell us more about Labirinto d'Acqua from 2006
Marcello Marinone:
Releasing Labirinto d’acqua
was a real bet. A new band, with such a difficult music, without a
label. We decided to open AltrOck label to release Labirinto,
and we’ve been lucky. Musically we had already three songs written
by Francesco, who added new compositions and one song from his “prog”
period (an instrumental rearrangement from his ’90 group The Night
Watch). We found immediately the “Yugen style”: complex music in
an avant-garde rock context, with a huge timbrical palette and rich
arrangements.
The
follow up album Yugen Plays Leddi - Uova Fatali was released in 2008.
Please tell us more about this album.
Francesco Zago:
I met Tommaso Leddi in 2001, working together in a chamber group (I
Budini Molli, or “Flabby Puddings”) who played acoustic
arrangements of prog-rock classics and some original compositions
(first versions of Catacresi and
Danze corazzate date
back to that era). In 2007, as AltrOck label we had the idea to
produce a cd with previously unreleased music of Tommaso from his
post-Stormy Six period. Instead of forming a new band specifically
for this project, we thought to “use” the Yugen live group of
that period (a flexible seven-to-ten-members band, with Tommaso on
mandolin). After a long period of arrangements, rehearsal and new
compositions by Tommaso (Colonia and
Complicazioni),
we entered the studio and recorded live the material in two days.
You
released your new album Iridule earlier this year. Please tell us
more about this album.
Francesco Zago:
With Iridule Yugen
came back to my music. It was quite a “fast” job (just six months
to produce and release it). The album collects brand new compositions
from the last two years, so I find it’s more consistent than
Labirinto,
musically and timbrically talking. Then we had a stronger rhythm
section, with Dave Willey (and Guy Segers just on one song) on
electric bass and Alberto Roveroni on drums, who made an excellent
studio job, great sounds and rhythmical ideas. For the first time we
added a voice (Elaine Di Falco), so you can find also at least one
“song” in the traditional sense. Then I’d like to point out
that Iridule
is not a concept album, even if Pale
Fire (a strange and beautiful book by
Vladimir Nabokov) inspired it. You can appreciate Iridule
without reading the book, but if you want you can go deeper in the
music through it.
How
would you describe your musical journey and developments from debut
album to Iridule ?
Francesco Zago:
Yugen is an unique occasion to express my musical ideas “on the
border” between chamber music and rock. Thanks
to the very different backgrounds of the musicians involved (from
classical music to jazz, from avant-rock to improvisation), I can
experiment with so many different possibilities. This would be
impossible both with an “academic” ensemble or a “normal”
rock group. I think Labirinto d’acqua
was really a surprise, because of the novelty and of the mixture of
acoustic and electric in such a complex language. Four years are
passed, so it’s quite natural that Iridule
is a more mature album: for example, I could better integrate
improvisation with the written material, overlapping and not merely
juxtaposing them. I tried new rhythm articulations, both orizontally
and vertically, experimenting irrational metrical relationships
between different instruments, and so on. Finally, Iridule
was conceived in a more conscious way, so it’s a better production
than Labirinto.
How is
your writing and creative processes ?
Francesco Zago:
I distinguish studio and live job. They’re different worlds, so
they require different skills and production practices. For the
studio cds, normally I prepare a complete score, and the people
involved doesn’t have so much space. When I ask them to improvise,
I use the recorded material to “build up” textures or more
structured sections (much as in Zappa’s “xenocrony”). In these
terms, “editing” is a creative process in itself, not just a
device to fix errors or else. I experimented extensively this kind of
process in Kurai
(released by AltrOck in 2009), even if in this case improvisation and
music as “breath” were the main features. In Iridule
the main theme is rhythm, but the idea behind the two projects is
quite the same. Live approach and attitude are completely different.
When we released Labirinto,
we didn’t even think to bring live that music; the “live” group
was born in the following months. Now Yugen live band is a
six-members group (sometimes in the last years we played even with
ten people on stage). Arrangements are quite different, and soloists
are much more free to improvise on the structures.
How
would you describe your sound and music ?
Francesco Zago:
I think one the main feature is “stratification”.
Since Labirinto d’acqua
I wanted to overlap different musical “objects” – rhytmical,
melodically, armonically. Strictly talking, that’s not
“contrapunctum”, because sometimes there’s no relation, at
least not explicitly, between different layers. This is quite evident
in pieces as Rovine circolari,
or Becchime.
Formally, I’m trying to go beyond the “song” form. I think that
songs need melody (not necessarily sung by the human voice) and
armony in a more traditional sense, but the “stratification” or
“textural” principle is however true (listen to Incubi
concentrici, or Cloudscape,
two melodic and “minimalistic” instrumental pieces, respectively
in Labirinto and
Iridule).
But I like to write very simple structure too, as I did for Ice,
just voice and acoustic guitars (or some miniatures in Kurai).
This brings to another feature: the language multiplicity. Atonality,
modality, different styles and so on can live together in Yugen. I
simply don’t understand (in 2011) an “ideologic” attitude
towards musical language (and this is true not only for academic
composers, but also for many rock and jazz musicians): today you
can’t simply “speak” just one musical language and, worse
still, take it as the “truth”. If this is “postmodernism”, so
Yugen could be defined postmodern. As for the sound, I’d like to
have deepness and perspective: not just orizontally (rhytmically) and
vertically (armonically and melodically), but also in a “third”
dimension, with “close-ups” and distant views, to speak in a
visual metaphor.
Besides
of Yugen; do you have normal daytime job or are you 100 % musicians ?
Are any of you involved in any other bands too ?
Marcello Marinone:
No people permanently involved in Yugen are
100% professional musicians. We all have a “daytime” job – some
related to music, as teachers for example, other completely
different. About 70% of the musicians involved in the studio album
come from other bands or different musical contexts – jazz, rock
and academic instrumentalist.
Francesco Zago:
It would impossible to earn living by playing Yugen music. I have
other projects – as Kurai, and Repertorio Zero, an electric
contemporary music ensemble – and I teach electric guitar, but my
main job has nothing to do with music. You
need a lot of passion to make Yugen or AltrOck, but it is greatly
satisfying too.
What
is your plans for this and next year ? Any chance we will see you
live on one of the RIO festivals next year ?
Marcello Marinone:
We really hope so! Probably 2011 will be dedicated to promote
Iridule,
but Francesco is going to write new music.
You
were also involved in the new Picchio Dal Pozzo live album. Please
tell us more about this album and your involvement in it.
Francesco Zago: We met the guys
from Picchio dal Pozzo the first time in Genova. We were promoting
Labirinto d’acqua
and we knew that they were in the audience that night, so we thought
to spring a surprise on them playing Uccellin
dal bosco and another song. They
appreciated so much that we started a collaboration, culminating in
the live act during AltrOck Festival 2008. Five members of Yugen
played live with De Scalzi, Griguolo and Di Marco. We recorded the
gig and released it some months ago.
To
wrap up this interview, is there anything you want to add to this
interview ?
Marcello Marinone:
We’re happy that Yugen and AltrOck are going well, despite any
difficulties. The label is going to release some new albums in the
first months of 2011. Factor Burzaco, from Argentina, has recently
completed their new album. The same is for a really interesting
italian band, Calomito. In 2010 we opened a new “prog division”,
for which Paolo «Ske» Botta, the keyboard player from Yugen, will
release his first solo project, with some members of Yugen too: it’s
an intriguing mix of prog, Canterbury style and a splash of RIO.
Camembert, Humble Grumble, October Equus, Sanhedrin and many others
out soon…
We hope they’ll have the
same positive feedback of the previous AltrOck cds!
Joined: February 08 2008
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Posted: December 21 2010 at 12:58
Great interview with a fascinating band! Iridule is not only my favorite album from this year, but a strong contender for favorite of the decade, at least! I still need to check out their first two albums, hopefully after Christmas.
Thanks to Torodd, Francesco and Marcello for the interview!
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Posted: December 21 2010 at 15:15
Great interview of a great band. I didn't realise how closely associated Yugen were with the AltRock label - I mean, I knew they were released by AltRock. So that was interesting to learn!
Like many others here, Yugen is most likely my album of the year. I think it's closest contender is labelmate Rational Diet's latest.
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Posted: December 21 2010 at 15:38
Excellent interview! Definitely well thought out responses and very interesting reading.
Great to hear about the new releases from Altrock coming in the future as well.
Dig me...But don't...Bury me I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
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