La dolce vita Stefano Di Battista

Album info

Album-Release:
2024

HRA-Release:
03.05.2024

Album including Album cover

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  • 1La vita è bella (Life Is Beautiful)02:56
  • 2Con te partirò (Time to Say Goodbye)04:45
  • 3Tu vuò fa l'americano04:04
  • 4Roma nun fa' la stupida stasera03:13
  • 5La dolce vita03:44
  • 6Via con me04:20
  • 7Una lacrima sul viso04:05
  • 8Sentirsi solo03:05
  • 9Volare05:11
  • 10La califfa03:19
  • 11Amarcord02:11
  • 12Caruso05:22
  • Total Runtime46:15

Info for La dolce vita



Even when music is notated relatively precisely, as in music, a performer must make many decisions because the notation does not specify all elements of the music. The process of deciding how to perform music that has been previously composed and notated is called "interpretation". Interpretations of the same piece of music by different performers can be very different in terms of the tempos chosen, the style of playing or singing, or the phrasing of the melodies. Composers and songwriters who perform their own music interpret their songs in the same way as those who perform the music of others. The standard choices and techniques available at a particular time and place are referred to as performance practice, while interpretation generally refers to the individual choices of a performer.

Nino Rota’s incredible composition – which lends its name to the album and instantly transports us to a boundless fantasy world – therefore sits alongside Paolo Conte’s Via con me and Nicola Piovani’s legendary La vita è bella. There are pop songs, like the amazing Una lacrima sul viso, written by Iller Pattaccini with lyrics by Mogol and turned into a hit by Bobby Solo, and an operatic echo in Lucio Dalla’s now classic Caruso.

All held together by a strong and unique sensibility, by the flawless playing of a superb band – Matteo Cutello on trumpet, Fred Nardin on piano, Andrea Sorrentino on bass and André Ceccarelli on drums – and especially by Di Battista’s ability to transform every piece into something else, transporting the listener to a magical (and here quintessentially Italian) new place. “I found working on these tracks took me into a beautiful world”, Di Battista continues, “so I decided the best approach was to let the tunes guide me, to enter into the melodic structures and discover their heart for my improvisation. In other words, not producing tracks featuring solos, but single entities, with the exposition and improvisation intertwined”. Some of his choices may appear unusual, like Con te partirò, written by Francesco Sartori and Lucio Quarantotto and introduced to global audiences by Andrea Bocelli, which in the saxophonist’s hands becomes a sort of magic portal between past and present. Or Domenico Modugno and Franco Migliacci’s ‘well-worn’ Volare (also known as Nel blu dipinto di blu), where Di Battista avoids taking the obvious path and instead breathes fresh life into the song, fully capturing its ‘surrealist’ spirit: “Performing pieces like these may be a gamble”, the saxophonist says, “but it is something I have always loved doing. And in the end, it turned out that these are perhaps the most interesting tracks on the album”. But it is not enough to call the route Di Battista charts through the melodic devices of the great Italian repertoire ‘eclectic’: this does not fully explain its richness. Like the brilliant leader that he is, Di Battista takes his bandmates into a hugely diverse array of landscapes and through an equally wide-ranging set of emotions. These range from the cutting irony of Renato Carosone’s Tu vuò fa l’americano, where the piece’s American and Neapolitan roots become lost in the ensemble’s limitless improvisation, to the subtle melancholy of Sentirsi solo, written by Piero Umiliani for the film Fiasco in Milan (original title Audace colpo dei soliti ignoti): “a composition I had not come across before”, the saxophonist notes, “from a Chet Baker soundtrack. It has an incredible atmosphere: there is no long, song-like melody, it is ‘sparse’, with a mood that transports you to that blue world that defines Baker’s universe, linked to his demons, and with a captivatingly mysterious flavour.

And there are other masterpieces on this album too: the magic of Roma nun fa la stupida stasera, written by the peerless Armando Trovajoli and the duo Garinei e Giovannini; the unprecedented allure of memory in Federico Fellini’s Amarcord, translated into music by Nino Rota; and the exquisite artistry of Ennio Morricone in La Califfa. All subtly balancing past – the compositions – and present – the way they are interpreted by Di Battista and his band.

“Taking on the past made us feel very small”, Di Battista concludes. “That music contains a level of artistry that seems very difficult to achieve nowadays. But the process of reviving these works, ensuring they can thrive in today’s world, gives us real satisfaction. This means I want to savour them; I am happier when I play and I have more fun. And I can explore inside them: they give me space to improvise, to invent, to forge a connection with my roots and my Italian culture, but also to look beyond. Because even when they were first written, these pieces – with their melodies, their captivating chromaticism and their joy – were never provincial, they never had borders”.

Born in Rome, saxophonist Stefano Di Battista came to jazz through the records of Art Pepper and Cannonball Adderley. Encouraged to move to Paris by pianist Jean-Pierre Como, who heard him during the summer of 1992 at the Calvi Jazz Festival, Di Battista quickly found his footing in the French capital.

Di Battista’s highly acclaimed album for Blue Note Records “Round About Roma” with a symphonic orchestra conducted by Vince Mendoza is “an exquisite work of music that engages the mind as well as the heart” (All About Jazz). Di Battista followed up with another two albums for Blue Note Records: a tribute to Charlie Parker Parker’s mood , and the virtuosic Troubleshootin’.

Stefano Di Battista is a master of sound and melody, virtuoso in his improvisations and authentic in his approach to the song. Three years after his first record on Warner Music Morricone Stories, he now returns with La Dolce Vita.

Stefano di Battista, saxophone
Fred Nardin, piano
Daniele Sorrentino, bass
Andre Ceccarelli, drums
Matteo Cutello, trumpet



Stefano di Battista
Born February 14, 1969 in Rome, Stefano Di Battista initiated himself into music during childhood, in a neighborhood orchestra composed mainly of brass. Having started the saxophone at the age of thirteen, he came to jazz through the records of Art Pepper and Cannonball Adderley, two musicians who will remain lasting influences. He then follows an academic training before starting to “do the job” in pop music. His first meeting with Massimo Urbani (1957-1993), an Italian alto saxophonist admirative of Charlie Parker’s style, also plays a decisive role in his ambition to become a jazz musician. However, it takes a combination of circumstances so that the talent of the young Roman saxophonist can burst into the open.

Encouraged to go to Paris by the pianist Jean-Pierre Como who heard him during the summer of 1992 at the Festival of Calvi, Stefano Di Battista quickly makes his way among several musicians of the French capital, who help him getting started, notably drummer Aldo Romano (Stefano is a guest on two albums) and conductor Laurent Cugny, who invites Stefano and his fellow trumpeter Flavio Boltro to join the Orchestre National de Jazz he established in 1994. Even if he is mainly active in France, he maintains close links with the Italian jazz community, recording with his compatriots Enrico Rava (1996), Rita Marcotulli (1998), Daniele Scannapieco (2003) and Dario Rosciglione ( 2004).

His third album on Blue Note, Round About Roma (2002), is therefore recorded with a transalpin quartet (Eric Legnini, André Ceccarelli, Rosario Bonaccorso), featuring a symphonic orchestra arranged and conducted by Vince Mendoza. Stefano then releases two more albums on Blue Note, a tribute to Charlie Parker, and the virtuosic Trouble Shootin’ (2007), featuring Fabrizio Bosso on trumpet and Baptiste Trotignon on the Hammond. A couple of years later, he records his album Woman’s Land (2011) on the Italian label Alice Records, taking as an inspiration several female historic figures of the 20th century. At the same time, he starts a long-lasting collaboration with Italian singer Nicky Nicolai, accompanying her on her own projects.

A much requested sideman, Stefano di Battista is often invited to play with his French and Italian colleagues, on stage and in the studio. His ability to engage a musical conversation with other artists can be found on his later albums. Giù la Testa (2014) is recorded with French guitarist Sylvain Luc, who is as proficient as Stefano in mastering the melody. He then features again Nicky Nicolai on an original project with writer Erri De Luca, La Musica Insieme, at the boundary between Neapolitan literature and musical performance.

For 2021, Stefano Di Battista is working on a new album : a tribute to the late composer Ennio Morricone, with whom he had the chance to work. This new project features André Ceccarelli on drums, Fred Nardin on the piano and Daniele Sorrentino on bass.

This album contains no booklet.

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