>>Ah<< features bassist Giovanni Tommaso, drummer Bruce Ditmas
and Franco D'Adrea, whose pianism lights up even the darkest corners.
Feeling a little under the
weather? Then open up and say Ah, because Doctor Rava is in! This warm rainy
day session is the perfect sonic elixir for what ails you. The sumptuous
diagnostics of “Lulu” lay their pianistic hands upon us first, and with them
the album’s leitmotif. Rava and D’Andrea are in fine conversational form here,
as they ever are, cracking open a Pandora’s Box of free improv before
re-attuning to a smoldering vamp. Rava starts us off strongly in “Outsider,” in
which he swings his rhythm section around and around like children holding
hands in a field. A swift kick from Ditmas brings us solid thematic closure.
“Small Talk” allows Tommaso his just airtime in what is by far the highlight of
the examination. Rava checks our pulse in the groovier “Rose Selavy,” breezes
wistfully through the title track, and gives way to “Trombonauta,” the album’s
brief yet impactful ballad, before ending “At The Movies.” This eclectic ode
breathes with the magic of Cinema Paradiso while threatening to topple from the
weight of its own remembrance. ~ by Tyran Grillo, ecmreviews.com.
ECM Records, ECM 1166, 1980
Recorded December, 1979 at
Tonstudio Bauer, Ludwigsburg, Germany
Musicians:
Enrico Rava - Trumpet
Franco D'Andrea - Piano
Giovanni Tommaso - Bass
Bruce Ditmas - Drums
Tracks:
A1. Lulu (8:05)
A2. Outsider (6:16)
A3. Small Talk (5:00)
B1. Rose Selavy (4:51)
B2. Ah (6:00)
B3. Trombonauta (2:46)
B4. At The Movies (5:45)
All Compositions by Enrico
Rava
Credits:
Producer - Thomas Stowsand
Engineer - Martin Wieland
Cover - Michelango Pistoletto
Layout - Dieter Rehm
Enrico Rava Quartet - Ah {FLAC} (1979)
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Enrico Rava is such a melodic trumpet player! Thanks you for sharing the music!
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