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Timoteo
"Dino" Saluzzi was born in 1935 in Campo Santa,
Argentina, into a family of folk musicians. Despite subsequent
classical training, forays into avant-garde composition, and
membership of the chamber group Musica Creativa, Dino has always
maintained that his folk roots are the most crucial element of
his music. On Mojotoro, the most extroverted of his ECM
recordings, he literally brings it all back home. This is the
first of his European releases to be recorded in Argentina, and
his band comprises family and friends. His brothers Celso and
Felix play, respectively, bandoneon and reeds, and his young son
Josè Maria makes a particularly strong showing on guitar and
bass. This project is nostalgic and forward looking: "Tango
a mi Padre" reflects on Saluzzi's early years: "My
father worked at the sugar cane factory and was barely able to
support us", he told Jazz Forum's Krystian Brodacki.
"We had no radio, no records, no electricity; we just
lived close to nature, to folklore, to the primitive music of the
Indians, untouched by any white influence. My father played the
guitar and the mandolin, and later took up the bandeon. He played
folk music from promotional music sheets, which were sent to us
from the capital, more than a thousand miles away. It was he who
introduced me and my two brothers to folk music. I took up the
bandoneon when I was seven".
As for the future: "I believe we will be able to develop
our own South Latin American music...This is already happening. A
new Latin American type of expression exists and is paving the
way for further new ideas." Mojotoro draws upon
the full range of South American musics: tango, folk, candina
music, candombe, the milonga music of the La Pampa province...
The candombe is a particularly vital element in this
"cultural symbiosis". The candombe rhythm originated in
Africa and was brought to South America during colonial times,
continuing to thrive in Uruguay. Its rediscovery by "tango
nuevo" musicians has encouraged a new freedom of expression
in the music, its "open" rhythms lending a terrific
drive to the title track here. Of the tango itself, so often
stilted in the hands of European interpreters, Saluzzi says:
"The tango is far more complex than jazz. In the real
artistic tango, which is kind of loose and permits free
interpretation, it is not enough to know the technical part, the
chords, the scales, etcetera, because it needs a totally
different expression, less aggressive, far more artistic. The
tango is something much more pure and complicated".
Saluzzi's earlier ECM albums, the solo Kultrum and Andina
(ECM 1251 and 1375) and the quartet recording Once upon a
Time...Far Away in the South (ECM 1309) were all, in varying
degree, wistful reflections upon Argentina from distance. Mojotoro,
Dino's family album, is firmly rooted in the soil from which his
inspiration springs. It is a warm, outgoing record.
Biography courtesy of Saudades
Tourneen
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