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Pierluigi Balducci: Blue from Heaven
ByWith four previous recordings, and a number of film scores and live European appearances behind him, the answer for Pierluigi Balducci is a resounding yes. An electric bassist clearly informed by

Steve Swallow
bassb.1940

Oregon
band / ensemble / orchestra
Paul McCandless
woodwindsb.1947

John Taylor
piano1942 - 2015

Stefano Battaglia
pianob.1965
A recording of unrepentant lyricism suggesting, at times, how Oregon might sound, had it originated in a Mediterranean country rather than the American Northwest, seven Balducci originalsone, the breezy 6/8 "The Light of Seville," bookending the record: first, as its de facto opener following the rubato miniature, "Introduction," its gentle melody a variation drawn from "The Light"; and, again, bringing Blue from Heaven full circle with a similarly structured take possessing just a tad added strengthare complemented by two covers that could not be more different yet, in these superb hands, cohere completely with the rest of the set.
Taylor sits it out on pianist

Brad Mehldau
pianob.1970

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954

Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014
Despite the name-power of those tracks, it's Balducci's writing that both shines and defines Blue from Heaven. The tango-esque "Fin de Siècle" shifts feel throughout its four-and-a-half-minutes, Taylor's increasingly buoyant support and Balducci's firm quarter-notes relaxing when the group turns to half-time, but only briefly. The bassist delivers a brief but compelling solo combining melodic intent and lithe imagination, while Taylor builds on characteristically dense voicings and dexterous linearity. McCandless, on oboe, reiterates the song's theme before taking the last and longest solo, his vertical intervallic leaps as impressive as his note-perfect thematic accuracy on this most difficult of double-reed instruments.
At just under 44 minutes, Blue from Heaven seems to pass by in an instant, but if there's truth in the adage "leave them hungry for more," Balducci succeeds in spades. He may have done so with musicians possessing considerably greater cachet, but throughout Blue from Heaven, this evocative and provocative bassist/composer is never less than a full-on and absolute equal. ">
Track Listing
Introduction; The Light of Seville; Fin de Siècle; Unrequited; Life in Three Sketches; Blue From Heaven; The Sky Over Skye; L'Equilibrista (to Ernst Reijseger); Our Spanish Love Song; The Light of Seville (alt. take).
Personnel
Pierluigi Balducci
bassPaul McCandless: oboe, soprano saxophone; John Taylor: piano; Pierluigi Balducci: electric bass; Michele Rabbia: drums, percussion.
Album information
Title: Blue from Heaven | Year Released: 2013 | Record Label: Dodicilune Records
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