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RICCARDO
FASSI TANKIO BAND
Serial Killer
Splasc(h)
CDH826.2
Role model for any aspiring musician, Rome-based keyboardist Riccardo
Fassi involves himself of all aspects of the "jazz business"
in Italy. Besides teaching piano at the university level and composing
film scores, he has won magazine awards for album he has created with
smaller groups and with his Tankio Band, which has been together with
few personnel changes since 1983.
This,
his latest big band outing is very impressive in spots, but suffers from
one of professionalism's defects: as a teacher and studio hand who must
do many things well, he appears to have adopted too many musical personas
as his own. With a CD consisting of 11 tunes that range from jazz-rock
to light orchestral swing to grandiloquent ballads to program music, with
a light dusting of avant garde devices, you sometimes feel like asking
the real Riccardo Fassi to please stand up.
Again
it should be stressed that most of the music here is technically excellent,
it just feels pretty bloodless. Take his excursions into fusion on the
title track, for instance. Original enough to feature as lead voice Sardinian
accordionist Antonello Salis, vocally harmonizing with his instrument,
it still sounds like a big band pastiche of jazz-rock licks. On side there's
the lighter than air soprano saxophone soloist, an overbearing, percussive
electric bassist -- who only plays on half the tracks -- and overemphasis
on an unvarying drum pattern. Fassi describes the arrangement as dodecaphonic
but it sounds closer to Special EFX than Schoenberg.
Another creative touch is dividing the foreground between guest violinist
Ruben Chaviano and alto man Sandro Satta on "Naked City." Relating
neither to the American TV show theme song nor John Zorn's album of the
same name, the fiddle lead and Alfredo Minotti's Latinesque percussion
flourishes soon fall victim to that deadly fusion beat and Satta's reliance
on a David Sanborn-like tone. This is a disappointment after the alto
man had earlier asserted his individuality on "Serial Killer (part
2)." Similarly, Massimo Pirone's subterranean bass trombone work
is the only highlight of "Raptus," built around another simplistic
beat and featuring a solo from guest trumpeter Enrico Rava in muted pop-jazz
territory. The general feel is of one of those "rockers for the youngsters"
tunes from a Buddy Rich's 1970s big band album.
Additionally,
featuring Rava on both parts of "Solstizio D'Estate (Summer Solstice)"
merely proves that the composer, soloist and the band can perform this
dreamy sort of ballad with the same sort of snoozy quietude that Guido
Basso brings to outings from Toronto's Boss Brass. Something that wouldn't
disturb the most reactionary sweet band fan, it's hard to believe that
this trumpeter played with sonic explorers like Steve Lacy and Louis Moholo
in the 1960s.
Much
better are the straightforward blues of "Modular Blue" and "Anfibi,"
which (finally!) bring in Gianluca Renzi on acoustic bass instead of Pirozzi.
Playing tuba, Pirone shines again on this number, unafraid to plunge to
the very depths of the unwieldy beast. Fassi also weighs in with some
Prestige/Blue Note funk organ and -- an original touch -- Rava and Tankio's
two regular trumpeters combine into a brassy trio spitting out notes with
different modulations, tones and pitches.
Inspired
by a skipping theme, "Anfibi" is an exciting "conduction,"
with the lines passed back-and-forth between full-bodied trombonist Mario
Corvini, Salis and Fassi, playing mainstream piano, while muted trumpets
cushion the solos in the background.
Finally
and distressingly, Fassi's arrangement of Ennio Morricone's theme for
"Indagine (Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion)" brings
into even bolder relief the different between an exceptional craftsman
like himself and a true original like the composer. Featuring the one-time
appearance of drummer Ettore Fioravanti -- and Renzi's acoustic bass --
its more than 11 minutes of different musicians, including Fassi himself,
duetting with the guest drummer on Morricone's tango-like theme. Working
both as memorable thematic music and a base on which to spotlight improvisations,
the tune allows the musicians to exercise their improv chops at length.
With
the home truth that Fassi isn't yet in Morricone's class definitely displayed
by this number, one can still hope that eventually the keyboardist will
reach that plateau. Perhaps if he concentrated on creating a Fassi style,
rather than a pastiche of many sonic colors, he would fare better. This
may be a fine CD for modern big band fanciers, but don't search for any
great originality here.
--
Ken Waxman
Track
Listing: 1. Serial Killer (part 1)*+@; 2. Serial Killer (part 2)+@; 3.
Modular Blue#+@; 4. Anfibi*+^; 5. Naked City%@; 6. One for Leonardo#*@;
7. Solstizio D'Estate (duo intro)#^; 8. Solstizio D'Estate (theme)#*;
9. Raptus#@^; 10. Intro*; 11. Indagine*^$
Personnel:
Enrico Rava #, Claudio Corvini, Gincarlo Ciminelli, trumpet; Mario Corvini,
trombone; Massimo, tuba, bass trombone; Riccardo Luppi, flute, piccolo*;
Sandro Satta, alto saxophone; Michel Audisso, soprano and alto saxophone;
Torquato Sdrucia, baritone saxophone; Ruben Chaviano, violin%; Riccardo
Fassi, piano, organ, synthesizer; Antonello Salis, accordion+; Luca Pirozzi,
electric bass@; Gianluca Renzi, bass^; Pietro Iodice, Ettore Fioravanti$,
drums; Alfredo Minotti, percussion
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