Italy,reviews,Yugen,Nightwatch,Botta,Dave Kerman,Thinking Plague,Finesterre,D.F.A.,Campo Di Marte,Franco Micalizzi,Italian,Heroes Temporis,Deadburger,Accordo dei Contrari,Milvus,Umiliani,Mah Na Mah
ITALIAN PPROGRESSIVE MUSIC, R.I.O./JAZZROCK & creative pop
        review page 1            (review page 2->)

*Progressive/R.I.O./Jazzrock :
Yugen ('05-'06,'10)
Finesterre ('01)
D.F.A. ('01)
Campo Di Marte ('72+'03)
Heroes Temporis ('06)
Deadburger ('07)
Accordo dei Contrari ('07,'11)
Milvus ('07)
Milesi, Pierre ('66-'70/07)
Nodo Dordiano ('09)

* Soundtracks :Franco Micalizzi ('74,'74)
Franco Godi ('75->78/01) + V.A.: La Linea (60s->01) (links : these moved)
Altrock Prod.Yugen : Labirinto D'Aqua (I,rec.2005-2006)****

Yugen’s release is an ambitious new progressive/Rock In Opposition related musical project which attracted members with a past in progressive rock, (avant) jazzrock, classical new music and Rock In Opposition styles.
Francesco Zago, like Marcello Marinone, had some experiences in his Genesis-inspired symphonic rock band Nightwatch group during the nineties, with several other projects after that, but now wished for this project to combine progressive rock and chamber music with R.I.O. elements. He had previously written a few chamber compositions, which they first started to enrich with rock arrangements for their new project, Yugen. Also the former drummer from Nightwatch, Diego Donadio contributed on their first demo, which was finished early 2005. After some try-outs many more members joined the band : keyboard player Paolo Botta (French TV) Swiss saxophone player Markus Stauss with bass player Stephan Brunner (Spaltklang), reed player Peter Schmid (Evan Parker,Vinny Golia) percussionist Massimo Mazza, harpsichord player Giuseppe Olivini (from Contrapplugged, one of the projects some members of Nightwatch had joined in), drummer Mattia Signò, Tommaso Leddi (Stormy Six) and U.S. drummer Dave Kerman (Thinking Plague, Ahvak, Present, 5uus, U Totem, Blast) for drumming on one track,with Udi Koomran(Thinking Plague, Avhak, Present, Chris Cutler) for the mixing and mastering, and some classical players : Maurizio Fasoli on piano, Elia Mariani on violin and Marco Sorge on clarinets.

The album is ambitious, but the group didn’t make it very simple for the casual listener. While with the first few notes a listener might still recall the Genesis / ELP / PMF area, this is rather directly taken into a loaded contemporary classical composition, immediately overly arranged with rock, with some contrasts of more quietness, but most often it is fast played compositions, with a few passages of progressive rock, and with lots of mostly classically composed contrasts.
Also I had to overcome the overload, and needed to give it various listens before I could find my comfort in the total concept. But when starting to listen more thoroughly to the ‘classical’ composition it all made much more sense to me, and the music for me worked best. During the first listens I had mostly the impression of how often the compositions seems to have been worked upon more than once, with each time the addition of more notes and layers, which in the end isn’t a weak point, but demands a more careful listen. The album gives the listener a kind of warning which you usually find on acidic products (because they can cause bodily damage) : “irritante” (irritating). But I don’t think it will irritate when the listener is properly prepaired. Even when I still think some of the multiple composition attention, is rather on the edge of saturation, with a proper three dimensional hearing the music remains for me pretty enjoyable. But myself, I heard also music from many R.I.O. groups and contemporary music composers myself, so I was "prepaired".

Also interesting to mention I think is that you can hear a few specific sound interpretation on sax, that give a few different touches here and there, something which I think was added by Markus Stauss.

Homepage : http://www.yugen.it/ & with audio : http://www.myspace.com/yugenband
Info on http://www.rerusa.com/..
Other reviews : -
German reviews : http://www.ragazzi-music.de/yugen.html
& http://www.babyblaue-seiten.de/index.php?content=review&albumId=7639NEXT
Altrock Prod.Yugen : Iridule (I,2010)****'

This second release from Yugen is more accessible than their debut, and it is worked out to perfection with some ideas from new and contemporary music and jazz-rock (some might say that it has certain Zappaesque flavours for the jazz-classical vibraphone contributions of simone Benevenetti) partly within a rock approach with near classically arranged compositions, played with a strong almost improvised spontaneity in the performance. Lots of instruments and musicians were involved, some of which are classical (the mellotron replacing at times something of the place of an orchestra). Mostly this is Rock In Opposition-like with lots of change melodically, sonically and rhythmically. This is even more alternated with vocal led more relaxed or pastoral passages, singing carefully with less arrangements accompanying (track 3 and 7), further on this approach intermingles with a contemporary classical approach in the singing and arrangements (like on track 5). Challenging in an attractive way. Highly recommended.

Guests include the full band of Thinking Plague, (from which Dave Kerman is called here the serial(ist) killer), Guy Segers (Univers Zero) and Michele Epifani (Areknames) amongst others. In total 19 musicians were involved. All compositions are by Franscesco Zago (guitars, mellotron and prepared piano).

Homepage : http://www.yugen.it/ & with audio : http://www.myspace.com/yugenband
& more audio on http://soundcloud.com/...
Label info : http://production.altrock.it/prod2.asp?lang=eng_&id=15&id2=128
Description on http://www.recordheaven.net/... & http://www.waysidemusic.com/...
German review on http://www.babyblaue-seiten.de/album_10967.html

More links to reviews (when available) will be added later


Moonjune RecordsFinesterre : Storybook (2001)***

At the first tracks of the CD the music of Finesterre reminds me somewhat of some Dutch Nederbeat bands (prog bands with flute like Focus or Supersister,..) as possible important influence into a style which is still more into the masterly Italian 70's progressive. Finesterre is one of these new bands for me who convince me they can make this music in Italy still today. Most of the new groups have references to this great period but little of them can convince. The live recording sounds however somewhat boosted on the first tracks (surely in the full band parts) while the music is very good, but after second listening I can also consider this as a merely contrasting effect. The many acoustic guitar parts and interchanging quiet passages make it up for this, and the overall quality of the music still is technically first class. It's a nice document of a great live musical performance.

Info : http://www.moonjune.com/storybook.html
http://www.moonjune.com/finisterreproject.com/
http://www.mellowrecords.com/finis-en.html
http://digilander.iol.it/ZUFFANTIPROJECTS/f_i_n_i_s_t_e_r_r_e.htm
Reviews of the three albums at http://www.holeintheweb.com/drp/fs.htm
& http://www.holeintheweb.com/drp/drpf&h.htm
& this item at http://www.holeintheweb.com/drp/drpfinis3.htm
& http://64.177.137.64/reviews/storybook.html
Remarks at http://www.e-prog.net/bands/finisterre.htm
German review http://www.progressive-newsletter.de/cd25_18.htm & http://www.progressive-newsletter.de/cd19_10.htm &
http://www.babyblaue-seiten.de/bands/finisterre.html
French review http://www.progresiste.com/fr/reviews/PR17/actu1.html#Finisterre
Dutch reviews at http://www.prog-nose.yucom.be/finisterre_storybook.htm
older review I did before (-not checked for spelling in those days-):
Moonjune RecordsD.F.A. : Work in progress live (2001)*°°

Spacetrance electronics stream with some prog band improvisations (drums, el. guitar and el.bass guitar) on the first 10 minutes track.
The following track shows somewhat pleasant more jazzy improvisations with some nice details in organ, and some singing.

The improvisations are somewhat from a melodic point of view (which is not my particular interest ; although the musicians are good). The third track starts exploring some musical ideas in a more complex rhythm, with a somewhat interesting guitar/percussion/organ interwoven section alternated with improvisation.

Although generally I like long tracks, "La Via" is from a dark nature making it difficult to enjoy it from an intuitive as well as from a pure structural composition analysing musical level.

"Panterra" has very much a jazzy fusion improvisation organ lead. There the organist shows his full talent (and his playing is great and should interest keyboard lovers, with nice prog accompany and in a perfect balance). After first hearing, it tired me a bit, and I wondered how much of such improvisations of ever expanding melodies doesen't become somewhat empty. But luckily the melodic part is not overdone as in some other neo-progressive groups. For me, the album demanded more listens to see the right perspective behind it.

As progressive music from a fashionable way, this group stands out in such an area, and there it should get its full apreciation. From a balanced playing view the group has obviously its talent too. I hope this description tells you something more about this music. If this could interest you please check their soundfiles at their Website.

Info: http://www.moonjune.com/dfawork.html
http://digilander.iol.it/dfa/ (with audio)
Reviews of both items at http://www.holeintheweb.com/drp/dfa.htm &
http://www.holeintheweb.com/drp/drpdfa2.htm
Other review at http://gnosis2000.net/reviews/dfa.htm
German review http://www.babyblaue-seiten.de/bands/dfa.html
and http://www.progressive-newsletter.de/cd14_4.htm
& http://www.progressive-newsletter.de/cd30_17.htm
two older reviews I did before (-not checked for spelling in those days-):
Vinyl MagicCampo Di Marte : live 1972 & 2003 (I,'72,'03)**'

I have to say first that the only official release from this group in 1973 is regarded, by me, as one of the absolute best of Italian prog rock, and of the classicaly inspired progressive rock music in general, varying from acoustic, very classicaly inspired music to heavy progressive rock. Thematically it was a musical concept in 7 parts, a reaction against the foolishness of war.

Band leader Enrico Rosa moved in 1974, to Canada, where he continued to develop his guitar techniques, including a flamenco guitar style, but he kept in contact with some of his Italian musician friends. Due to growing interest in progressive rock, there obviously was also a renewed interest in Campo Di Marte.
Enrico told me that in the concerts of those days the repertoire varied, compared to the actual album, and he dreamed of adding some similar material in a form of CDM part 2. In 2003 he had managed to get some musicians together for such a follow-up album. This is released now, together with the distribution of a test pressing LP, taken from the only recorded concert from Campo Di Marte back in 1972 (live in Firenze).

* Live 1972 : The recording quality of this album was not incredible, and there has not been very much care taken in making the sound much better on the CD, and I can understand why, because not much of it is very different from the final 1973 LP. It was recorded directly from the source, without No-Noise systems or any other filters. So it gives only an idea of what such a recording might have been like. We can hear a great energy in the playing, and more than just performing the music, like on the first track "prologo part 2", we still hear some subtle improvisational skills, which are different from the 1973 LP, and although it is a shame about the distortion, as a big fan I still enjoyed hearing at least those subtle differences. The official LP remains the actual article ; releasing this version did not add much to it.

* live 2003 : The live version of 2003 repeats parts of the original score as well, played a bit slower, less as 'an invention of the moment', but the potential in it has the tension of becoming more than it is now. I personally don't believe yet that all participating musicians could come to create such a moment once more. More than being a cover band, it shows itself mostly as a solicitiation for a potentional live band to perform the original Campo Di Marte concert in our days as well, with a few additional themes and variations at it.

While the band itself still remains a bit studio-bound and an occasional accompanying band, it's mostly Enrico Rosa's contribution which shows the same colorfulness as before, and adds the new ideas. Eva Rosa still feels best with the classical music reference, and is the subtle part of the band.
In general the live recording suffers a bit from a very amplified mix and -effect, more than a creative balance with sounds derived from a more acoustic and classical dimension, -something which could have been achieved in a studio recording-, but as a one track live recording, it proves a good enough performance to convince inviting this band for more. Not only Enrico's guitar appealed to me but also the voice variation compared to the first versions of the tracks.
The rest of the band sound to me professional enough for a performance, but still too young and not creative enough to have a really renewed the CDM band.

The new composition parts do contribute well to Campo Di Marte's repertoire. This includes a bluesrock composition showing mostly the skills of Enrico. We also have "Italian Irish", another wonderful composition, on electric guitar, which might possibly have sounded more natural on acoustic guitar, but within an evolution in this live concert, it is acceptible like it is. "Rock Barock" then, is a very good outro continuation on the 4th CDM theme. A nice contributive part. The last additional track, recorded on a video recorder during a live concert, shows another outro from the band, in a improvisational way, introducing the members with the first musical melodic background theme.

As a live band this recording shows a more than acceptible performance. But still I wished Enrico would work on a second part as a studio album, with enough time to be able to get develop such a recording together. Personally I would only accept musicians as equally talented as Enrico for it, not just musicians who nicely accompany, but are able to add something special. It will not be easy to stand next to the incredible 1973 recording, so only the best conditions make this possible. And I hope such possibilities will be granted one day.
With all my heart I wished this to become true. I am afraid rather than idealistically supporting such big projects in reality most companies will prefer to have a fragmented interest in many bands, who only create some elements or ideas but who don't ask for much support for promoting the releases. Sadly, mostly it's private work and idealistic contribution from musicians themselves nowadays, through much sacrifice get such projects together, without more support.

Info : www.campodimarte-italianprog70.com & www.enricorosa.com

Another work of Enrico Rosa, with Rosae is reviewed on http://progressive.homestead.com/Italy.html#anchor_239
Fin De Siècle MediaFranco Micalizzi : "Hold-Up" (1974)***'
Fin De Siècle MediaFranco Micalizzi : "Adolescenza Perversa (1974)***'

Italy has a rich tradition of movie scores (erotic movies, thrillers, crimi’s, horror movies, spaghetti westerns,..). A style which was more commonly used were classical arrangements mixed with rock (and a bit of funk) with a dose of easy listening pleasures. Ennio Morricone was the most known musical director outside Italy, but there was of course much more. This new label reissued two soundtracks from this lesser known master.

* The “Hold-Up” soundtrack is like a movie on its own with arrangements that use mostly a certain type of combination of instruments, expressing with it various different directions and motions. The sound is typical early/mid seventies and varies from passages with wordless, slightly surreal “popopoo” female vocals, relaxed “pompompom” bass, lush orchestrations, shopping centre flutes, some piano and electric piano, in a mixture of kitsch, entertainment and innocent drama, over more funky danceable drama with brass, speaking flute, congas, and some electric guitar expressing more the crimi part. Like with Bruno Nicholai, also harpsichord is used for this purpose, from post-Bach like associations, romantic but still with drama, or more speeded up, with more “rocking” arrangements.

* “Adolescenza Perversa” is a different kind of movie and shows also many more different human situations and emotions into musical areas, so a lot of different things are shown to be happening.
The style still is recognizable, like the titletrack (which sounds comparable to the previous album, with wordless vocals, orchestrations, drums, bass), a theme which is recycled just here and there, as it was common in filmmusic.
Also here are parts in a post-Bach flavored romantic mode. The first time that this happened, this quickly changes into erotic funky and bossa nova rhythmic seduction music. I like most the few tracks that are into erotic daydreaming, directing towards unrestrained orgasmic pleasure, with high pitches female vocals and breaths, wordless voice-supporting male confirmations, with harpsichord, flute, and with brilliant increasing emotionality orchestrations (strings with piano), in literally breath-taking & making tensions.
The main themes with lightly fleeing vocals returns a few times more, as well as post Bach tensions, which can lead also, in combinations of harpsichord with a rock band, strings and flute, to more horrifying “thriller” modes. On “M15” for instance, this horror feeling has another surprising dissonant strings part which is rather experimental with its droning harmony, with a still recognizable structure.

There are also a few great band improvisations, from relaxed to more jazzy/funky (with use of Hammond organ as well!!).

Especially this score shows the composer’s talent very well.
In general, the pleasure domes linger, switch and move smoothly from one experience to the next. Recommended.

While “Hold Up” is the most consistent of both releases, “Adolescenza Perversa” is the most mobile-theatrical / suspense album of the two.

Audio  "Hold-Up" : http://www.moviegrooves.com/shop/holdupsoundtrackmicalizzi.htm
& http://www.findesieclemedia.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=135
Poster of "Hold-Up" : http://www.pollanetsquad.it/film/134_a.jpg
Audio "Adolencenza.." : http://www.findesieclemedia.com/...
& http://www.moviegrooves.com/shop/adolescenzaperversaost.htm
Info : http://www.dustygroove.com/item.php?id=2q9vjsrs48
Label : http://www.findesieclemedia.com/
Reviews with audio : http://www.scorebaby.com/newreviews.html

PS. Playlist of Goblin, Frizzi, Libra, Sorgini, Bruno Nicolai and other
horror movie soundtracks : http://psychemusic.org/HORRORROCK.html
Magni Animi ViriHeroes Temporis : Magni Animi Viri (2006)**°'

In the late nineties some metal groups started to open up the musical scene and adapt classical music into their sound, as well as some heavenly vocalists. The metal groups often felt their music was enriched with classical music sound and orchestra, often with help in Eastern Europe where orchestras were a bit cheaper. I followed a while this change, because there were interesting examples (some orchestrated examples were Rage, Haggard, Therion,… but there were also  earlier and other brilliant orchestrated bombastic examples from other genres reaching in the same directions occasionally and accidentally, like firstly, Devil Doll, and later, Elend). After a while I lost track of the scene. Then I was told about this ambitious project led by a duo of composers, Giancarlo Trotta and Luca Contegiacomo, a metal-rockopera with no less than 100 members including the Bulgarian Symphony Orchestra, directed by Giacomo Simonelli, a tenor vocalist and narrator,..), partly recorded on the Bulgarian National radio. This is huge !

The opener tracks are impressive, with full orchestra and choir, and even when this is with the slightly deafening effect of the metal rock band approach, this is all perfectly produced and well balanced and with a great result, creating an almost Apocalyptic effect. Also the Italian tenor, Franscesco Napolitano has an impressive voice, and his contribution inspiration owns much in the way of debt to the Italian opera tradition. Most middle tracks are with a second vocalist, Ivana Giugliano, and are much more arranged like pop music, with a bit of metal as well as orchestrated effects, and are sung with a certain emotional emphasis, in another, newer sort Italian tradition.

I especially like the opener tracks, which are repeated in an instrumental version at the end of this concept.

Homepage : http://www.heroestemporis.com
& with audio & video : http://www.myspace.com/mavsite
Info : http://htmlgear.tripod.com/..
Other reviews : http://www.progressiveworld.net/...
& http://www.progressor.net/news03_2007.html#heroes_temporis
GoodfellasDeadburger : C'è ancora vita su marte (2007) ?

will not be reviewed (yet, but perhaps later I will) :
(so far) I find this album a bit too difficult to review properly

Homepage : http://www.deadburger.it/ with audio on http://www.myspace.com/deadburger5
& on http://www.deadburger.it/download.html
Other reviews : http://www.digitalisindustries.com/foxyd/reviews.php?which=2450
& on http://www.headheritage.co.uk/addressdrudion/96/2007
& on http://www.chaindlk.com/reviews...
& on http://www.terrascope.co.uk/Reviews/Reviews_June07.htm#Deadburger
AltrockAccordo dei Contrari : Kinesis (I,2007)***°

The Altrock label continues to make just that little more distinctive choice of bands, which delve something from symph/prog but have also enough cleverness to go beyond that (towards jazz-rock, contemporary classical influences and directing in that way also towards R.I.O.). Also this band’s first release proves such strength.

The band was formed as a trio in 2001 in Bologna (Italy), was a quintet since 2004, but has been a quartet since 2006, before recording this album, in a direct live session, in just two days, with only short additional overdubs of violin and sax afterwards.
It has a fundament of instrumental progrock/neo-progressive style which is symphonic in progression, with a fluent and smooth drive that is more associated with Jazz-rock, but isn’t, except that some parts, like those more led by Rhodes piano are jazzier. Especially some rhythmical changes could recall King Crimson associations, while the new symphonic jazz-rock at its utmost is more something we know from their colleagues, Deus ex Machina. Some interesting evolutions have contra-rhythmic ideas, closer to contemporary music.

Homepage with audio on http://www.myspace.com/accordodeicontrari
& http://www.myspace.com/altrockproductions
Intro on group : http://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=2870
Label : http://www.altrock.it/Productions/home_altprod.html
Other review : http://www.waysidemusic.com/ProductInfo.aspx?productid=ALTROCK+003
German review on http://www.babyblaue-seiten.de/...    next-
Autoproduction Rec.    Accordo Dei Contrari : Kublai (I,2011)***°

In this new release it is clear the band hangs only partly in the composed rock area, with compositions and tunes which are rhythmically founded in a certain complex scale, pushed forward by electric guitar, bass and organ mostly, where the tunes themselves are often played together by organ and guitar, with the drums often following the more straight drives, the band has another move towards the Canterbury styled regions of jazz-rock. Therefore they invited John Sinclair (Caravan) to sing along on one of their tracks (track 4), simply accompanied by electric piano and drums. With such voices included as in this track they directed the inspirations towards a band like Soft Machine. The second track then is based upon a Middle Eastern tuned acoustic oud improvisation with a moving-forward keyboard drone before the full band takes over in composed rock/RIO fashion, turning this into a moody improvisation on organ and electric guitar with relaxed emotionality, adding vibraphones and drums, showing hints to some of the more Middle Eastern association once adapted by Area from which I can recognise a small part. Never the band’s compositions are becoming too complex. This should work very well for live performances. 

Description on http://www.waysidemusic.com/...
Homepage : http://www.accordodeicontrari.com/
German review : http://www.babyblaue-seiten.de/album_11557.html
preview releaseMilvus : demo (I,2007)***'

A bit strange or different for this instrumental, progressive rock band is that although the genre, not only in the 70s, usually brings forth overly ambitious efforts in playing, contrary (especially here the drummer sounds as if he is not pushing for anything extra), this group very often plays in a very relaxed way, and even a few times are more limited in their improvisations (a bit bluesy and also jazzy more often), as if they are enjoying themselves on stage without having anything to prove to anyone or themselves.
The balance of sound in the group is just perfect, bass, guitars and organ : the 70s sounds of organ often is combined perfectly with the guitars melodically, and almost smoothly jazz-rock at times, and succeed to create especially this way perfectly enjoyable music. For this I like especially “Parsifal”.
“Ariel” is a bit more playful and symphonic, and is also more ambitious and fast, also contains a very moody part.  Also “Solaris” has more rhythmically driven complexity...

Homepage with audio on http://www.myspace.com/milvusmigrant
booklet
Vinyl MagicNodo Gordiano : Flektogon (I,2009)****

I have complained before, how more often, especially in the 90s, symphonic progressions in rock music fail in vision or intelligent manoeuvres, but more and more I notice releases where symhonically arranged progressive music succeeds to create a next step, make it sound modern, more contemporary for there are so many examples of good music and developments groups should not be blinded by melodic progressions alone. Nodo Gordiano’s music still is easy to follow. -Because of having read books on Stockhausen I cannot help it now but to analyse and measure music in a couple of standards even more than before, and that’s how I notice how this group also uses a sort of rhythmical evolution which you can compare with how language evolves, something like pm-bdmpm-pm-pm, it could even have been written down this way instead of with notes (melody & rhythm) (Stockhausen himself says he writes about rhythms and melodies beyond the perception of the body movements and spoken language, which I think is an interesting idea ; he says this way the perception goes beyond the limits of someone’s own body and incorporates movements and patterns in different spaces)-. The band Nodo Gordiano has an attractive intelligent way of interacting, making its layers slightly independent but still interactive, where most often a faster bass drives certain melodies, the rhythms either follow in the background or make precise leading indications for the evolutions, the electric guitars and keyboards add different movements of improvisation, and here and there we hear some flute or even sax. And just a few contemporary choir passages (the introduction) are included too, or soprano voice. On “Ozymandias part II” a whole range of percussive possibilities is expressed with complex solos. Each track seems to be divided in nicely different, but also rather open sections, so that even in the 30 minute track this creates a feeling this remains open and natural, it did not saturate at any moment but also that it creates no real ending.

Info & audio : http://www.myspace.com/nodogordiano
Homepage : http://www.nodogordiano.com/
Other reviews : -
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