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Alla Boara: Le Tre Sorelle
By
Anthony Taddeo
drumsb.1986
But he also picked up his father's native language during a three-month interval in Italy that would prove decisive in his musical development. The result is Le Tre Sorelle, a graceful, charming and stylish recording that uses traditional folk melodies as a jumping off point.
Taddeo's muse was the series of field recordings made in Italy in 1953-54 by the American folklorist

Alan Lomax
producer1915 - 2002
There is nothing more traditional here than the melody of the now-extinct work song that inspired "The Almond Sorters." Taddeo stirs the pot by stretching it over an 11/8 rhythm for
Tommy Lehman
trumpet
Daniel Bruce
guitarb.1976
Similarly "Funeral Lament" clothes Lomax's recording of an elderly professional mourner's lamentations in an eerie, post-"In A Silent Way" sonic haze where the wheezy low pedal tones of
Clay Colley
accordionTaddeo's command of color and texture impresses throughout, but you cannot really do justice to Italian music without a singer, and in
Amanda Powell
vocalsOn the title song, she effortlessly picks up the silvery thread of sweet innocence in Lomax's field recording of the charming melody. Two cuts later, she puts vocal steel into the spine of "Fimmene, Fimmene," a song of female empowerment that soars into an Amazonian scat episode that conjures both the river and the fierceness of the female warriors.
But this would not be a proper representation of the Italian spirit without a celebration, and Le Tre Sorelle has two bangers that link the twin aspects of Taddeo's identity. "Ballu" is based on polyphonic music from Sardinia where singers imitate the sounds of livestock. Bruce takes the barnyard inspiration literally, with guitar work straight out of

Bill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951
Ian Kinnaman
bassAfter starting in a Calabrian-to-Cajun slow waltz groove, a snare-drum tattoo from the leader launches "Mi Me Ne Fon" through a cycle of rhythms that end up on a kind of Cuban conga-meets-New Orleans party groove. Lehman gets the spirit with a strutting solo scaled for a street parade. Taddeo caps the breathless sprint to the finish with his only drum solo of the session.
It is an example of Italian sprezzatura expressed through the medium of the shout-chorus drum explosionas perfect an expression of Taddeo's intercontinental aesthetic as you can imagine. Bravo! ">
Track Listing
Alla Boara; Le Tre Sorelle; C’Avanti C’è; La Montanara; Fimmene, Fimmene; Almond Sorters; Funeral Lament; Ballu; Som Som; Mi Me Ne Fon.
Personnel
Anthony Taddeo
drumsDaniel Bruce
guitarChris Coles
saxophoneClay Colley
accordionJamey Haddad
percussionIan Kinnaman
bassTommy Lehman
trumpetAmanda Powell
vocalsMichael Ward-Bergeman
accordionAlbum information
Title: Le Tre Sorelle | Year Released: 2022 | Record Label: Shifting Paradigm Records
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