Vienna-based Hungarian guitarist Zsófia Boros brings remarkable
interpretive clarity and a uniquely unifying touch to a diverse
collection of pieces in her second recording for ECM, Local Objects. Phrasing
in distinct ways while staying faithful to the spirit of the music, she
offers new perspectives on standards of the concert repertoire such as
Carlo Domeniconi’s “Koyunbaba” and Jose Cardoso’s “Milonga”, differently
flavours Egberto Gismonti’s harmonically-inventive “Celebração de
Núpcias”, and reveals a highly observant musical eye in the choice of
contemporary guitar pieces such as Mathias Duplessy’s “Nocturne”, Alex
Pinter’s “Gothenburg”, and the epic “Fantasie” by Franghiz Ali-Zadeh.
Gismonti’s “Celebração de Núpcias” appeared on the 1976 recording Dança das Cabeças (a
duo with late percussionist Nana Vasconçelos), the Brazilian master’s
first ECM album. Zsófia’s version highlights the trance-like qualities
of Gismonti’s original: “I couldn’t stop playing it,” she says.
“I just wanted to hear those harmonies.”
On “Milonga" by Argentinian Jorge Cardoso and Brazilian Anibal Augusto
Sardinha (Garoto)’s exquisite, lyrical “Inspiração”, Boros adds
introductions of her own. On the latter, harmonics suggest glass stars
over a distant shore, before the melody arrives. “Like a film director,
you focus on a small thing and it creates a feeling before you know what
the film is about. Water droplets, droplets on a flower, a flower
garden … I don’t want to go straight into the room where the story takes
place, I want to go first into the garden, to see the flowers.”
With
Italian composer Domeniconi’s four-part “Koyunbaba op. 19”, about a
thirteenth century hermit who lived in a cove by the Aegean Sea, Boros
puts each of the various sections and elements of the piece in an
explicit light, creating an enlarged vision of the whole. After
climactic chords, soft paper placed on the guitar strings helps produce
the muffled, quasi-sordino passage...
... that opens Zsófia ’s building rendition of the “volcanic” presto, as she describes it, played fast but light.
Another extended offering on the album is “Fantasie” by Azerbaijani
composer Franghiz Ali-Zadeh, an open-ended instrumental and
compositional showpiece (in the positive sense of the term). Inside its
complexity, Zsófia says her challenge was to “find the story”. “I need
to make a piece my own for it to be authentic. And I can only be
authentic if I’m honest, honest if I’m free.”
Short pieces by composer-instrumentalists bookend the album. The opening
“Nocturne” by Frenchman Mathias Duplessy evokes, if unconsciously
perhaps, the nocturne in its original Italian denomination describing a
type of serenade. “I can hear it a thousand times and it still touches
me,” she says.
“Gothenburg”, by Austrian guitarist Alex Pinter, is about the end of a
relationship. “Everybody knows how when a relationship ends, you have
all these questions,” says Zsófia , for whom Pinter is a friend. She plays his lament liberally, empathetically, as an “object of local
insight” to borrow from the Wallace Stevens poem that lends its title to
this recording and is published in the CD booklet. (ECM Records)
excelente guitarrista, gracias !
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