Advertisement
Advertisement

Ferdinando Romano: Totem

In brief:
"Trumpeter Alessi is for me the outstanding soloist in this set of colourful yet in places gossamer-light contemporary jazz"

Trumpeter Alessi is for me the outstanding soloist in this set of colourful yet in places gossamer-light contemporary jazz. Wolf Totem is the most memorable theme, or at least it was while I had the music on as apt accompaniment for writing this review, although in a sense themes are not relevant in music such as this, where the deeply reflective thoughts of the musicians take priority.

Such thoughts are to the fore on the lengthy Mirrors, before an episode of near abstraction ruffles the music’s surface. However while it comes as a welcome contrast, this episode also documents musicians for whom the realms of the free present a void they’re unable to face, let alone fill. That said, Alessi and Alessandrini’s collective improvising evokes a much earlier point (and place) in jazz history. Curly is heavy on the prosaically reflective, and while such a mood can provoke torpor, here the depth of sincerity lends proceedings a personal sheen even while it probably won’t be enough to keep particularly inquisitive documentary film makers from using it as incidental music.

Advertisement

Sea Crossing Parts 1 and 2 are unsurprisingly notable for continuity, with Alessandrini’s outing on the first part being him at his most animated, before everything literally stops for a very reflective piano interlude which had me checking to see if the break between parts 1 and 2 was marked by the abrupt change – it wasn’t.

Memories Reprise left me wondering about the future of the strain of contemporary jazz this album is emblematic of, namely one made by musicians who as far as I could hear were identifiable only by their note patterns, not the individuality of their tones or approaches. This is a very crowded field now, or at least it was before the virus brought the curtain down on live music as we know it, and the anonymity implied by my comments may not be enough to attract audiences either old or new once the new normal is something more than a term for casually dropping into conversation.

Find out more about Ferdinando Romano: Totem at ferdinandoromano.com

Discography
The Gecko; Evocation; Wolf Totem; Curly; Sea Crossing Part 1; Sea Crossing Part 2; Memories Reprise; Mirrors (56.13)
Ralph Alessi (t); Tommaso Iacoviello (flh); Simone Alessandrini (as, ss); Manuel Magrini (p); Nazareno Caputo (vib, mar); Ferdinando Romano (b); Giovanni Paolo Liguori (d) Cavalico, UD, Italy, October 2019.
Losen Records LOS 242-2

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Graham South Quartet: By And By

By And By presents just under an hour of all-traditional African American spirituals, all arranged by Graham South with the exception of Interlude, which...
Advertisement

Obituary: Junior Mance

Pianist, composer and educator Junior Mance died in his New York City home on 18 January. He was 92, and had been in failing...
Advertisement

Betty Bennett: the chick singer carries on

In October, Betty Bennett celebrated her 98th birthday and is now beset with financial difficulties. A spirited and stylish singer, she sang with swing...
Advertisement

So You Want To Sing The Blues: A Guide For Performers

'...it’s also a text that could appeal to any music fan who wants to understand more about how the blues are sung' The title of...
Advertisement

The Humbler – Danny Gatton

Comprehensive chronicle adds new footage of 'the greatest guitarist you never heard', one perhaps isolated by his eclecticism and virtuosity
Advertisement

JJ 11/91: Andy Hamilton – Silvershine

Andy here makes his recording debut at the ripe old age of 73 and somebody should get him back in there very soon as...
"Trumpeter Alessi is for me the outstanding soloist in this set of colourful yet in places gossamer-light contemporary jazz"Ferdinando Romano: Totem