A few minutes before the dawn, there is an instant where a soft dim light
rends the horizon
eastwards and the night prepares to share the heavens with the coming morning.
In Italian
this feeble glow is called “albore” and it also means the beginning of
something.
“Albore” is a record about an initiation, a spiritual journey that drives
the listener into an
hypnotic and evocative world made of Yoruba polyrhythms, Middle Eastern
impressions,
spiritual jazz drifts, Ethiopian groove vibes and afrobeat-like brass sections.
It is a mix of
different sonic landscapes where the instruments of Volpe's orchestra weave a
texture of
voices into a sort of magical realism. These 10 compositions pay tribute to
John Lurie’s late
work, the spiritual jazz of Pharoah Sanders and the ethnomusical studies of
Lloyd Miller.
Written and arranged by Manuel Volpe, the album is ably supported by an
excellent
production team made up of Massimiliano Moccia, Andrea Scardovi, Kelly Hibbert
and
Volpe himself under the fine supervision of afro-jazz-fusion expert Andrea
Benini (Mop
Mop).