By Sammy Stein
Monologo Addosso comprises Beatrice Arrigoni (vocals), Maddalena Ghezzi
(vocals), and Francesca Naibo (vocals, guitar). It is produced by Luca
Martegani. Beatrice Arrigoni is a singer, improviser, composer, and
performer with a range of projects under her belt. She participated in the
2023 “improvisation voice and electronics” workshop led by Valèrie Philippin
at IRCAM in Paris and studied improvisation with Stefano Battaglia and vocal
technique with Renaissance and Baroque singer Elena Carzaniga. She has
performed at many festivals and events.
Maddalena Ghezzi is an Italian singer, composer, and improviser who settled
in London in 2009 and now works in London and Milan in the fields of jazz,
improvised music, and vocal and creative experimentation. As a leader, she
has released five EPs, all part of her Minerals series: Amethyst (with
Thodoris Ziarkas), Halite (with Ed Blunt), Opal (with Francesca Naibo),
Emerald (with Maria Chiara Argirò), and Dolomite (with Ruth Goller), and two
albums with her band FUWAH. She has performed at the London and Milan Jazz
Festivals and many venues.
Francesca Naibo is a guitarist from Vittorio Veneto but Milanese by
adoption, who plays many genres, including classical, electric, fretless,
and pedal steel. Having spent years researching solo performance, she
focuses on exploring the fields of free improvisation and contemporary
music. Her interest is particularly focused on using both the acoustic and
electric nature of her instrument, venturing from roaring drones to
microscopic vibrations. She studied in Venice, Milan, Bern, and Basel,
graduating in classical guitar and free improvisation, and collaborated with
various European musicians, especially in Central and Northern Europe. She
has worked with many composers and musicians, and her album Namatoulee,
received critical acclaim
Monologo Addosso is a sonic work which work that reworks and transfigures
the poetry of Elena Cornaggia in order to fully convey its expressive depth.
The result is nine ‘sound paintings’ with great dramatic power, in which
electronic inserts, the use of extended techniques, polyphonic and
contrapuntal writing interact to compose an evocative and expressive mosaic
of colours.
It is very much an ‘out of the box’ concept with the interaction between
poetry, sonic effects, and vocals creating a merging of the arts. The
imagery the music creates is powerful and incredibly profound.
The music and interpretation of words and pictures create an intersection
where poetry, music, and electronic effects come together to create
something unique. Different styles are linked, with the vocals creating
beautiful harmonies, explorative diversions, and snippets of spoken
conversation to weave a landscape of colour and evocative sonic portraits.
The purity of sound, created by vocals, guitar, or electronics, is presented
sometimes as a raw, material element, or a primordial essence, a lyrical and
ecstatic evocation, abstraction, idiom: the work's sonic journey invites the
listener into profound contemplation, expressing the urgency of an internal’
monologue capable of releasing energy and revealing the essence of all
things.
What this album is also is intensely feminine. That might sound like a
strange thing to say as a reviewer, but there is a sense of power and deep
connection between the women who created this recording that is palpable and
creates a deep sense of sisterhood.
'A Mani Aperte' opens the recording, and this is sensual, where the women
produce short vocal sounds, including ‘dings,’ intakes of breath, and sighs.
It sounds mad, and it is, but it is also very effective at engaging the
listener. The final third comprises atmospheric electronics topped by a
beautiful melody, gorgeously worked harmonies that contrast and provide a
grounding, before the short trills and whispered effects complete it and act
as a reminder that the track began in this tone.
'Tra il sonno e la parole' features harmonies backed by warping, echoing
electronics that fade, allowing the electronic effects to come to the fore,
but gently and with the guitar adding definition in a melody. The harmonies
are beautiful, with deep contralto and sweet soprano melding to become as a
single unit with many parts.
Throughout the album, the vocals adapt to the soundscape, either enhancing
the effects, or contrasting with purity and beautiful harmonies. From the
rickety tickety effects on 'Dentro Alle Squadro' to the standout 'Mi
raccogliesse,' which features harmonies that break into a variety of sounds,
from clucks to melodic inserts and explosive effects, portraying the variety
of essences that womankind encompass perhaps.
There are echoes of ecclesiastic harmonies and madrigal singing, alongside
improvisation and imaginative electronic effects on some tracks. 'Paessagio
mentale' is intense and deeply emotive, while Implodo esplodo is held
together by a madcap, chattering spoken harmony line, the voices performing
as percussive instruments before the slow build-up of electronic effects
overpowers the vocals, which retreat into a deep hum that develops a regular
rhythm akin to breathing, and whispered inserts and snippets of voice.
The closing track, 'Quando il cervello prude' showcases each musician and is a
beautiful, atmospheric way to end the album – and go back to the start.
A powerful, beautifully worked project, this is for listening again and
again.
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