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Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Andrea Giordano - Àlea (Sofa, 2024)

By Ferruccio Martinotti

The equation is error proof: vision + ideas + courage = a record that deserved to rotate on our turntable. Endless are the combinations and one of those is certainly represented by Alea, the work of Andrea Giordano, subject matter of this review. 

Giordano, born in 1995, is an experimental musician, singer and composer from Cuneo, Italy, who after the degree at Siena Jazz University went on with a master in jazz and performance at the Norwegian Academy of Music, where she was a student of Sidsel Endresen and where she is currently pursuing a bachelor in composition. Alea, a suite for large mixed ensemble in which Giordano also performs as vocalist and multi-instrumentalist, is the heartfelt tribute the her friend and mentor, the italian jazz musician and pedagogue Alessandro Giachero, who died unexpectedly in 2020, dating from the start of the master degree in Oslo, where she began to develop songs towards an album of ensemble music. As per the constituents, she opted for a mix of instruments with similar sounds and timbres that could blend seamlessly. 

Giordano said on Bandcamp that the tracks, recorded separately at the Norwegian Academy of Music in 2022 and assembled later, are like separate rooms (“stansias”) within the same house, each as an individual expression of tension, repetition and ceremony. Dissonances, fragmented cyclical motives and laments are rendering overwhelming the dimension of grief and sorrow, along with shamanic, Native American-like chants that seem sometimes to exorcise the immeasurable pain. Crucial to the project is Giordano’s ongoing research into the Piedmontese dialect, a Gallo-Romance language primarily spoken in the Italian northwest region of Piedmont, that is endemic to her native city of Cuneo. She had previously sung librettos of poetry in the predominant Piedmontese dialect, a process she describes as “an attempt to be honest with my roots” and for this record she commissioned Vieri Cervelli Montel, a composer and friend of both Giordano and Giachero, to write lyrics in italian that she and Montel then translated together into her hometown dialect based on her interviews with scholars and family. The result has much more to do with the musicality of the words than with their semantic, as Giordano is delivering them in a way totally devoted at the sole service of the sonic architecture of her work, reminding us sometimes even the lyricism of Bjork and the great Elizabeth Frazer. 

The album’s title has tripartite origins: it is a reference to the Italian for “to Alessandro,” a nod to the aleatoric nature of his death and an epithet of the Greek goddess Athena. The ensemble sees: Andrea Giordano: compositions, voice, organetto; Alessandra Rombolà: flutes; Cosimo Fiaschi: soprano saxophone; Ferdinand Schwarz: trumpet; Joel Ring: cello; Kalle Moberg: accordion; Emanuele Guadagno: guitar; Lara Macrì: harp; Ingrid Hjerpseth: organ; Christian Meaas Svendsen: double bass; Nicholas Remondino: percussion and gran cassa; Ingar Zach: percussion, gran cassa and vibrating membranes. We look forward to see Giordano’s next move.

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