Pelagos Stefano Battaglia
Album info
Album-Release:
2017
HRA-Release:
15.09.2017
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
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- 1 Destino 06:20
- 2 Pelagos 10:12
- 3 Migralia 12:24
- 4 Lamma Bada Yatathanna 04:51
- 5 Processional 05:24
- 6 Halap 08:39
- 7 Dogon 01:47
- 8 Life 10:59
- 9 Lampedusa 07:08
- 10 Hora Mundi 14:07
- 11 Lamma Bada Yatathanna (Variation) 03:37
- 12 Exilium 09:24
- 13 Migration Mantra 11:34
- 14 Horgos E Roszke 06:45
- 15 Ufratu 05:37
- 16 Heron 05:37
- 17 Brenner Toccata 07:42
Info for Pelagos
To date, Stefano Battaglia’s ECM discography has taken the listener to many different places. The Italian pianist has reinterpreted art songs of Alec Wilder on In The Morning, set a dedication to Pina Bausch amid improvised duets on Pastorale, created new structures in the moment with Dominique Pifarély on Raccolto, drawn inspiration from mythical and legendary locations on The River of Anyder and Songways as well as from diverse way stations in the biography of a great Italian polymath on Re: Pasolini. Cultural and other influences flow into his music from very many directions.
Pelagos, Battaglia’s new double album of solo piano – recorded at the Fazioli Concert Hall in Sacile, Italy, last year – can be heard as an extended meditation on themes of exile and migration. “Reality sometimes suggests or implies improvisations and even repertoires,” he notes. Titles of individual pieces provide some directional clues and cues to the matter at hand.
Apart from the Arabic traditional song “Lamma Bada Yatathanna”, a tune with historical roots in Moorish Andalusia, which is heard in two variations, all the music here is by Battaglia. “Pelagos”, “Halap”, “Exilium”, “Migration Mantra”, and “Ufratu” are compositions by the pianist. All other pieces were spontaneously improvised, though Battaglia’s feeling for form makes also the extemporaneous pieces seem robust. The album derives from two sources: a live concert and a “closed doors” session at the Faziola Hall earlier the same day. The tracks “Destino”, “Migralia”, Processional”, “Halap”, “Life”, “Hora Mundi”, “Exilium”, “Migration Mantra”, “Heron”, and the version of “Lamma Bada Yatathanna” heard on CD 1 are all drawn from the concert performance.
Stefano Battaglia plays both piano and prepared piano here, sometimes simultaneously, exploring a remarkable range of sound colours in melodic and texturally-inventive pieces. Some, of almost hypnotic allure, seem to have an associative frame of reference spanning the distance between ritual music, traditional song, contemporary composition, and modal jazz, although Battaglia himself is wary of style definitions. As he once said, “For years I have tended to simplify, to aspire to a ‘de-idiomisation’ of the musical universe, and particularly to imagine music as a universal metalanguage, a place which is genuinely without boundaries, not just in words but in fact.”
In the original notes for the Sacile concert, given within the context of a Piano Jazz 2016 festival, Battaglia spoke of the conceptual themes running through his programme. These included “songs and dances of the suffering countries of the Mediterranean and Balkan areas”, and the practice of improvisation as a means of embracing the unknown, as “a manifesto for those who, like me, see it as a path of revelation, through all of its mysteries.”
Born in Milan in 1965, Stefano Battaglia originally trained as a classical pianist. He first attracted attention on the European festival scene, playing mainly baroque and 20th century music, before making the transition to music that incorporated improvisation, inspired initially by Paul Bley and Keith Jarrett. By the late 1980s he was winning jazz awards. Subsequently he played with Lee Konitz, Dewey Redman, Marc Johnson, Barre Phillips, Steve Swallow, Kenny Wheeler, Pierre Favre and Tony Oxley, among many others.
Battaglia has given master-classes at Siena Jazz each summer since 1988, and since 1996 he has led Siena’s Laboratorio Permanente di Ricerca Musicale, a musical research workshop, where he has been able to explore his interests in improvisation, composition and experimentation, in particular the improvisational practices of diverse musical languages.
He has been an ECM artist 2003, when the double album Raccolto (Harvest) was recorded.
Stefano Battaglia, piano
Stefano Battaglia
Born in Milan in 1965, Stefano Battaglia originally trained as a classical pianist. He first attracted attention on the European festival scene, playing mainly baroque and 20th century music, before making the transition to music that incorporated improvisation, inspired initially by Paul Bley and Keith Jarrett. He cites Bley’s Open, To Love and Jarrett’s Facing You as critical encounters in his musical development. By the late 1980s he was winning jazz awards. Subsequently he has played with Lee Konitz, Dewey Redman, Marc Johnson, Barre Phillips, Steve Swallow and Kenny Wheeler, among many others.
Battaglia has been an ECM artist since 2003, when the double album Raccolto (Harvest) was recorded. Subsequent releases have included Re: Pasolini, a tribute to the Italian filmmaker and polymath, which includes contributions from Salvatore Maiore and Roberto Dani, and Pastorale, an album of duets with percussionist Michele Rabbia. Battaglia’s fourth ECM release, an organic-sounding piano trio recording entitled The River of Anyder (2011), was hailed as a “career-defining album of unsettling and unpredictable beauty” by John Kelman. On In the Morning Battaglia’s trio reflect on the work of American composer Alec Wilder (1907–80), best-known for his popular songs (recorded by Peggy Lee, the Mills Brothers, Frank Sinatra and others). The pianist says: “after working on Wilder’s chamber music I wanted to develop a deeper connection with his intriguing musical universe, and I've discovered an immense hidden treasure.”
Battaglia has given master-classes at the Siena Jazz each summer since 1988, and since 1996 he has led Siena’s Laboratorio Permanente di Ricerca Musicale, a musical research workshop, where he has been able to explore his interests in improvisation, composition and experimentation, in particular the diverse improvisational practices of different musical languages.
Booklet for Pelagos