Canto Libero
Download links and information about Canto Libero by Pino Minafra. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 6 tracks with total duration of 53:11 minutes.
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Artist: | Pino Minafra |
Release date: | 2001 |
Genre: | Jazz |
Tracks: | 6 |
Duration: | 53:11 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Terra Rossa | 7:31 |
2. | Alarm | 12:29 |
3. | A Night In Banlieues Bleues | 9:16 |
4. | Canto Libero | 8:48 |
5. | Tango | 7:59 |
6. | El Zorro | 7:08 |
Details
[Edit]Since the release of Sudori with his Sud Ensemble in 1995, Italian trumpeter Pino Minafra remained discreet as a leader, preferring to blend his voice among others in large-scale groups like the Italian Instabile Orchestra, Gianluigi Trovesi's octet, and Bruno Tommaso and Michel Godard's ensembles. Canto Libero sees him back in the leader's chair, but facing a quasi-free improv quartet. Canto Libero translates to "free singing," but this is not a conversion to abstract free-form. Minafra's Mediterranean lyricism, playfulness, and most of all jazz upbringing are still part of his game. He even brought a few melodies along, platforms to jump from or land on, including "Tango," a highlight from Sudori. Even when playing free, this quartet keeps it tonal and often beat-driven. In "El Zorro," for example, pianist Giorgio Occhipinti improvises a paso-doble quickly picked up by drummer Vincenzo Mazzone, one of Italy's unsung heroes. Alto saxophonist Sandro Satta completes the formation — he's the one pushing Minafra out of the frame, dragging him by the bell of his trumpet into freer grounds. In the end, the debate between composition and improvisation matters little: the energy and sense of camaraderie oozing from this CD are enough compensation for the fact that the players, knowing each other so well, tend to fall into a predictable rut. What they do, they do very well and with contagious pleasure. Canto Libero was recorded live at Banlieues Bleues in Paris, March 28, 2000. ~ François Couture, Rovi