Advertisement
Advertisement

Felice Clemente: Solo

In brief:
"Though not before a live audience, Clemente is clearly flying without a safety net here with no sidemen to catch him – and soaring gracefully"

Solo saxophone is a daunting proposition, but some of my most transcendental jazz experiences have been one-man sets by Anthony Braxton, Steve Lacy and Evan Parker. Felice Clemente is hardly a pioneer like those players, but has a warm, mellifluous sound that makes this 54-minute solo set pure pleasure.

The saxophone’s lack of sustain makes it a challenge as an unaccompanied live instrument. So Clemente picked an 18th-century church with a rich natural reverb that becomes an extension of his instrument – or instruments, as he alternates between tenor, soprano and clarinet. 

Advertisement

On La Nani he even adds a metronome, that ancient drum machine, talking back to it with popping beatbox sounds from his horn in the album’s most experimental moment.

He carries on a call-and-response dialogue with himself on Blues For One from Branford Marsalis’s In My Solitude, another album featuring solo sax in a church. Clemente ends with a bit of a dirty mute sound harkening back to Marsalis’s New Orleans, whose sound Clemente delves further into with his own Mixiland Jazz Band. A regular at the Blue Note Milano, he’s also performed with the likes of Mike Westbrook and Gregory Hutchinson.

Like In My Solitude, this album features a Bach composition, a fluid Sarabande. Besides the opening Harlem Nocturne from 1939 and one by French tubaist Michel Godard, the other selections are by Clemente or other contemporary Italians. Those include Ennio Morricone, whose Cinema Paradiso theme takes flight with Clemente’s circular-breathing helix spirals on the soprano.

He stays with the straight horn for the elegant, almost baroque original Bà – Bà, returning to the tenor for the final blues-based Free Improvisation.

Though not before a live audience, Clemente is clearly flying without a safety net here with no sidemen to catch him – and soaring gracefully.

Buy Felice Clemente: Solo at croceviadisuonirecords.com

Discography
Harlem Nocturne; A Secret Place; Princess Linde; Bà – Bà; Blues For One; Nuovo Cinema Paradiso; La Nani; Rapsodia Temperante; Cello Suite No. 5 In C Minor, BWV 1011: Iv. Sarabande; Song For Clarinet; Moods; Notturno No.2; Free Improvisation (53.47)
Clemente (ts, ss, cl). Montecalvo, Italy, 15-16 November 2019.
Crocevia di Suoni 5018

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Adam Linsley: Locking Down

Like lots of other working musicians whose regular schedules came to a grinding halt last year, trumpeter Adam Linsley put his time out to...
Advertisement

Obituary: Joseph Jarman

When the Chicago AACM (Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians) organisation was formed in 1965, two of the mainstay groups involved in the...
Advertisement

Strings reattached

In jazz history there seldom appears to be any middle ground for the violin. Fans either love it or hate it. Almost from the...
Advertisement

Jazz With A Beat – Small Group Swing, 1940–1960

American poet holds that Louis Jordan's conversion of big-band swing into small-group shuffle set the pattern for 60s soul jazz
Advertisement

Norah Jones: Live at Ronnie Scott’s

Jones’s Come Away With Me album was a great example of highly effective music marketing, using what might seem like the most unlikely of...
Advertisement

JJ 03/84: Steve Khan – Eyewitness

Forty years ago Mark Gilbert welcomed the guitarist's adoption of the Gibson 335, chorus pedal and new melodic directions
"Though not before a live audience, Clemente is clearly flying without a safety net here with no sidemen to catch him – and soaring gracefully"Felice Clemente: Solo