CD/LP/Track Review

Tommaso Cappellato: Open (2010)

By
MARK F. TURNER,
Mark F. Turner

Mark F. Turner

Senior Contributor since 2001

Considering himself a modern day 'Jazz Explorer' Mark continues to discover new and exciting music territories.

Recent articles (528 total)

Published: August 5, 2010
Tommaso Cappellato: Open

The demise of modern jazz has been greatly exaggerated. Countless musicians around the globe are contributing new chapters to the wonderfully complex idiom of composition and improvisation. One such example can be found in Open, the debut from drummer Tommaso Cappellato. His experience stretches from taking lessons with local drummers in Italy at 16; enrolling in the Drummers Collective in New York in 1996; studying with notables like Billy HartBilly Hart Billy Hart
b.1940
drums
, Jorge Rossy and Reggie WorkmanReggie Workman Reggie Workman
b.1937
bass
; and involvement in versatile works with Don ByronDon Byron Don Byron
b.1958
clarinet
, the Vibes Trio ( with vibraphonist Bill WareBill Ware Bill Ware
b.1959
vibraphone
and bassist Brad Jones), and the hip hop band Brohemian.

Appropriately, Open encompasses an array of Cappellato's interests and abstract musicality, articulated by a superlative band—Michael BlakeMichael Blake Michael Blake
b.1964
saxophone
(saxophones), Giovanni Guidi (piano), and Joe Rehmer (bass). Impressions of "ree jazz are intrinsically revealed in the way the quartet explores and interacts. The title contains a seedy, old school funk vamp with ethereal piano lines that suggest both early Herbie HancockHerbie Hancock Herbie Hancock
b.1940
piano
and the urban soul of singer Marvin Gaye. In stark contrast, "Episode 29" is a nearly two minute surreal trip into the unknown—ethereal horn skronks, pensive piano comps, a tempo.

While the music is rooted in earthiness, there's a sense of skirting the edge on tracks such as "World of Traveller." What sound like a reflection on Alice ColtraneAlice Coltrane Alice Coltrane
1937 - 2007
piano
's "Blue Nile," with Blake's mesmerizing sax, quickly moves into urgent waters with a deep pocketed groove and piercing individual statements. "Mysteries Of Life" is the inverse—stretching, and toying with a simple theme that is measured and passionate.

Good drummers keep the rhythm but outstanding ones color it. Cappellato is an artisan, whether exploiting a persuasive hip hop beat on the too brief "Scream Away" or providing a melodious song-like solo in "Talk To Me," where he carefully manipulates every inch of his kit. His cymbals sound like tambourines on "The Knight," before the band enters the track's circuitous pattern. A soft touch surfaces in the ballad "Krishnamurti," the recording's most straightforward track, but reverts back to unexpected territory with the unusual drum/bass duo, "He Said Then She Said," then concluding with Cappellato's brilliant piano solo, "Natural Element." A fitting and surprising conclusion to this revealing debut.

Track Listing: Nowhere, Now Here; Open; Episode 29; World Traveller; Mysteries of Life; Talk to Me; Scream Away; The Knight; Krishnamurti; He Said Then She Said; Natural Element.

Personnel: Tommaso Cappellato: drums, piano (11); Michael Blake: soprano and tenor saxophone; Giovanni Guidi: piano; Joe Rehmer: bass.

Record Label: Elefante Rosso
Style: Beyond Jazz

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