The highly creative bass player Stefano Scodanibbio (1956-2012) also composed extraordinary music for double bass. Alisei (Trade Winds) features his compositions for solo bass, for two basses, and for bass ensemble. Among them is a world premiere recording of Ottetto,
an often breath-taking thirty-minute compendium of all the extended
techniques he invented or developed throughout his life. “It is his
great spiritual legacy”, says Daniele Roccato, who co-founded the Ludus
Gravis bass ensemble with Scodanibbio. As solo performer, Roccato rises
to the challenges of Due pezzi brillanti, a piece which pushes virtuosity to its limits, and “makes the bass sing in its own true voice” on the title composition. Da una certa nebbia, for two basses, also a premiere recording, pays implicit tribute to the work of Morton Feldman.
Daniele Roccato first heard Stefano Scodanibbio in Paris in 2008: “I
listened, thrilled as he unleashed that immense energy of sound, shaping
it all the while.” The following year, Roccato invited Scodanibbio to a
bass festival in Perugia and it was there that the Ludus Gravis
ensemble was founded. The two bassist/composers came to share a deep
friendship, although active collaboration as performers was cut short by
Scodanibbio falling ill with motor neuron disease which, by 2010, made
it impossible for him to continue playing the bass. Roccato travelled to
Mexico in November 2010 to help him work on the score of the Ottetto.
“I left Cuernavaca with a kind of storyboard of the score,” Roccato
writes in the liner notes, “containing all the indications relating to
expression, articulation and dynamics.” Back in Italy he began working
with Ludus Gravis to bring the multiple techniques on which the piece
was based to life. In the meantime, the first pages of the final score
arrived from Mexico. “Later Stefano joined us to help us prepare for the
premiere.” The first part of the piece was premiered at the Angelica
Festival in Bologna in May 2011. The first complete performance of the Ottetto took place at the Venice Biennale in October 2012, nine months after Scodanibbio’s death. (ECM Records)
I recently discovered your wonderful site.
ResponderEliminarThank you for introducing to us all of this beautiful ECM music!
I would like to request a few re-uploads if you can spare the time, as the present links do not work:
ECM 2195/96 (Zehetmair Quartett)
ECM 2329 (Ustvolskaya)
ECM 2395 (Aschenmusik)
ECM 2513 (Brodsky Elegie)
These are the only recordings I have been unable to find to complete my collection! Could you please refresh the links?