Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Manel Fortia: Despertar
Manel Fortia: Despertar
ByDave Liebman
saxophoneb.1946

Billy Hart
drumsb.1940

Miguel Zenon
saxophone, altob.1976

Manel Fortia
bass
Charlie Haden
bass, acoustic1937 - 2014

Marco Mezquida
pianob.1987

Raphaël Pannier
drumsMeaning to awaken, Despertar sheds illumination on the darkness from which we all emerge throughout its sweeping, cinematic whole. Urged into being by Fortia's deeply ingrained hammers and pulls and Pannier's restless patter, "Dormir" engages a dreamy, watery, translucent realm of imagination that delivers us to the rushing, uncoiling themes of "Circular." Epic in scope and construction, the piece builds one riveting crescendo upon another, revealing Mezquida's flowing symmetrics and Pannier's crashing might. Fortia holds the brave center as the track whirlwinds for a wondrous eight-plus minutes. Repeat. Play. Repeat.
The quietly restless "Saudades" presents a beautiful respite after "Circular's churning activity, though it too has a burning core stoked by the locked in tow of Fortia and Pannier. Mezquida's insistent calligraphy, as it does so confidently throughout, colors the track with fresh, broad strokes.
"Crescente" shares the same majestic opulence and grit as its predecessors, with Mezquida again holding the persistent motifs and themes front and center as the rhythm section powers through, establishing himself as a pianist to keep tabs on. Despertar then closes out on a trio of thoroughly engaging works as "Aires de Libertad" lends its Spanish flair to the pop-minded "Simple." Starting out as a near-classical recital with an

Elton John
pianob.1946
Track Listing
Dormir; Circular; Saudades; Espiritual; El Dia Despues; Crescente; Aires de Libertad; Simple; Despertar.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Despertar | Year Released: 2022 | Record Label: Segell Microscopi
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
