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AVA Trio: Digging the Sand
ByAmsterdam-based baritone saxophonist Giuseppe Doronzo has a background that includes jazz improvisation, classical and non-western music. He has composed for choreographer Cora Bos-Kroese and performed with saxophonists

Joe Lovano
drumsb.1952

Chris Potter
saxophone, tenorb.1971

Robin Eubanks
tromboneb.1955

Paolo Fresu
trumpetb.1961

Ralph Alessi
trumpetb.1963

Taylor Ho Bynum
cornetb.1975

Vince Mendoza
composer / conductorb.1961

Han Bennink
drumsb.1942

Michael Moore - Clarinet
clarinetb.1954

Kaja Draksler
pianob.1987
Zurich-born Pino Basile is a new addition to the AVA Trio and the percussionist brings an unusual array of resonances to the group. Like Doronzo he has an enormous range of musical experiences having worked in jazz, classical, theatre music, dance, and contemporary circus theatre. A researcher and teacher, he shares his knowledge of Mediterranean region percussion wherever the opportunity presents itself. On Digging the Sand Basile plays the tamburello (tambourine), bedir (a frame drum) and the cupaphon, a tuned friction drum with an astounding range of sounds. The latter is found in the music of four continents; made from a variety of materials it isin Basile's handsa proxy for strings, reeds, and less identifiable sounds.
Turkey's Esat Ekincioglu has been playing bass since his pre-teen years and has worked across genres as diverse as heavy metal rock and Turkish pop music. Relocating to the Netherlands in 2011, he studied at the Prince Claus Conservatorium in Groningen and won a major European talent competition as a soloist. A prolific performer, he has toured throughout Europe, the Middle East, and the US. Confirming his credentials for this non-conformist group, he also records and performs with the improvised jazz-punk-psychedelic quartet Kuhn Fu.
This is an exceptional and carefully studied collection, enhanced by collective and individual improvisations. Doronzo wrote six of the eight pieces on "Digging the Sand" with Ekincioglu contributing "Tosun" and "Kacti." The music is as mesmerizing as it is intricate. The baritone oozes warmth and edginess simultaneously on "Tosun" and "Cala di Turchi," the latter a blend of Mediterranean and western styles nicely augmented by the bedir and a deep, woody bass solo. Inspired by the local elements of air and water, "Vento di Ponente," is a piece with rudiments of Balkin dance interwoven with AVA's idiosyncratic instrumentation. Doronzo's title track suggests something darker as it creeps along with subdued effects that wrap up with the halting but disconcertingly soulful baritone. He takes up the Egyptian double-reed mizmār for the middle section of "Distanze," a piece whose pace modulates from languid to break-neck speed, and back again.
The Mediterranean region is steeped in an array of ethnic sounds and the music on Digging the Sand is appropriately full of dichotomies; it is exotic even while being grounded in fundamentals of Western and non-Western music. It is immersed in dreams, mystery, and melancholy but with moments of intensity that suggest whirling dervishes. Doronzo, Ekincioglu, and Basile are erudite and virtuosic guides, navigating through these rich and diverse sonic surroundings. ">
Track Listing
Cala Dei Turchi; Espero; Fadiouth; Digging the Sand; Tosun Kacti; Ayi Havasi; Anamoni; Distanze.
Personnel
Giuseppe Doronzo: baritone saxophone, mizmar (8).
Album information
Title: Digging the Sand | Year Released: 2019 | Record Label: Marocco Music
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About Giuseppe Doronzo
Instrument: Saxophone, baritone
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