Pelagos is a solo piano album by Stefano Battaglia. It was recorded in 2016 and released by ECM Records the following year.
Pelagos | |
---|---|
Recording by Stefano Battaglia | |
Released | 15 September 2017 |
Recorded | May 2016 |
Venue | Fazioli Concert Hall, Sacile, Italy |
Genre | Jazz |
Label | ECM |
Producer | Manfred Eicher |
Pianist Stefano Battaglia had recorded six albums for ECM Records prior to this one.[1] The theme of the album is "the suffering countries of the Mediterranean and Balkan areas."[1] For the two days before the recording, Battaglia was in a monastery, "meditating upon the meaning of migration [every kind of migration]."[1]
The album of solo piano performances by Battaglia was recorded at the Fazioli Concert Hall in Sacile, Italy[1] in May 2016.[2] Two sessions were recorded at the same venue – one with an audience and one without.[1] Some of the pieces include playing on a prepared piano.[3]
Approximately four hours of music were recorded.[4] Producer Manfred Eicher selected around two hours of playing for release.[4] Of the tracks, five ("Pelagos", "Halap", "Exilium", "Migration Mantra" and "Ufratu") are Battaglia compositions,[2] eleven are improvisations[1] and one is a traditional Arabic song, "Lama Bada Yatathanna", that is performed twice.[3]
Some of the track titles are in keeping with the album's theme: "Lampedusa" is an Italian island where migrant boats from Libya landed.[1] "Horgos e Roszke" are towns on the Hungary–Serbia border.[1] "Exilium" means "exile" in Latin; while "Destino" is Italian for "destiny".[1] The first of these four is an improvisation; "Crushed notes, in pairs, become slowly louder, in protest or simply in pain."[1] The second is also an improvisation, played quietly.[1] The final two "are founded on a few dark repeating left-hand chords like knells of finality, from which Battaglia's right hand seeks release in markings upon silence, in isolated notes that gather to bare melodies."[1] Additionally, "Ufratu" is named after the Euphrates.[4]
Pelagos was released by ECM on 15 September 2017.[2] Applause was cut from the recording, so does not appear on the album.[1]
The JazzTimes reviewer believed that this was the best of Battaglia's ECM recordings: "Pelagos is an achievement of extraordinary depth, realized through an extraordinary range of artistic means."[1]
Tracks drawn from the concert performance are: 1, 3–6, 8 (CD1); 2, 4, 5, 8 (CD2)[2]
Authority control ![]() |
|
---|