
The accentuating winds of “Marcatu” waft past our noses. The scent is
moist, hinting at lichen. Our breathing quickens us as we climb into
thinner air, compensated by a majestic and quiet beauty in all
directions. Gismonti’s piano introduces itself as the traveler who will
be our guide. As he works his magico on the keys, bass (Zeca
Assumpção) and drums (Nene) assume his lead, leaving Gismonti running
with a saxophone (Mauro Senise), and us, following close behind. Every
gesture of “10 Anos” is another footstep tracing the outskirts of a
place unknown. And without knowing it, we have become one person. We
wish to introduce ourself to the new community in the vale, into which
we have now crossed. Drums nip at our heels as we find ourselves
propelled by the downward slope. We are welcomed with ceremony in “Frevo.” But then, a lone figure cuts through the celebration, bringing
with him the possibility of destruction. Instead, he shows us the wisdom
of local ways, observing proper form in the presence of new life, the
possibilities of love, and the realities of an ever-changing kinship. As
the forest yields ancestors’ whispers, that their progeny might better
survive, so too are voices encamped here among their people, where fires
burn low and judgments even lower. Yet somewhere in the shadows, the
saxophone lies in wait, trickster in disguise. Whatever mischief lies in
store, however, is dispelled by the crystalline joys of “Lôro.” Here we
find rebirth, brought forward to a council of harmony.
A four-part tribute follows, an epic in true Gismontian fashion. This
time around, his guitar returns cloaked in the shadows of pianism,
carried by an airborne saxophone. Every fluted note is an ensnared
animal, gift of the hunt and of the gather. Recounting those undeniable
moments of community that embraced us, we hear the voices of our own
past in the harmonium, bleeding into guitar and drums. From this
tenderness emerges “De Repente,” an engaging 12-string interlude that
could give Gustavo Santaolalla a run for his money any day. And run it
most certainly does, as if after spending time in the village, we find
our heart also ensnared, only now by the life we abandoned on our way to
getting here. And so, we take these feet and put them to the ground as
quickly as they will, running hand-in-hand with the person we once were.
The Ralph Towner-like diction here makes for one of Gismonti’s most
captivating solo pieces. In our wake we leave the lamenting “Vale Do
Eco.” The newly escaped continues in our place, lost and alone. In “12
De Fevereiro” we become her lullaby as she lays herself among the ferns
and slumbers. And there she stays until a new village grows in her
place, her dream at last realized in “Carta De Amor” before making her
final leap into a rare green flash that halos the setting sun.
This album is a perfect example of what “World Music” really should
be: not music of this, or any, world, but music that is a world in
itself. Arguably Gismonti’s best date on any label and an essential one
for your collection.
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