Egberto Gismonti – Sol Do Meio Dia (1978/2023) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Egberto Gismonti - Sol Do Meio Dia (1978/2023) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz] Download

Egberto Gismonti – Sol Do Meio Dia (1978/2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 50:42 minutes | 867 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © ECM

Inspired by his time with the Xingu Indians in the Amazon, to whom the album is also dedicated, Sol Do Meio Dia (Midday Sun) is a thoroughly fascinating transitional album by multi-instrumentalist Egberto Gismonti. Joining him are percussionists Nana Vasconcelos and Collin Walcott, guitarist Ralph Towner, and, for a brief time, Jan Garbarek on soprano saxophone.
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Jan Garbarek, Egberto Gismonti, Charlie Haden – Magico: Carta de Amor (2012) [Official Digital Download 24bit/48kHz]

Jan Garbarek, Egberto Gismonti, Charlie Haden - Magico: Carta de Amor (2012) [Official Digital Download 24bit/48kHz] Download

Jan Garbarek, Egberto Gismonti, Charlie Haden – Magico: Carta de Amor (2012)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/48 kHz | Time – 01:47:59 minutes | 1,14 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Digital Booklet, Front Cover | © ECM

Carta de Amor is a fascinating set of previously unreleased live recordings from three outstanding musicians: Jan Garbarek, Egberto Gismonti and Charlie Haden. The album documents music captured at Munich’s Amerika Haus in April, 1981 and highlights the trio’s improvisational empathy and sensibilities. Each musician contributes pieces to this repertoire which includes five pieces by Gismonti, Garbarek’s “Spor” and Charlie Haden’s “La Pasionaria”.
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Egberto Gismonti – Dança Das Cabeças (1977/2016) [Official Digital Download 24bit/192kHz]

Egberto Gismonti – Dança Das Cabeças (1977/2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 49:59 minutes | 1,60 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © ECM

Egberto Gismonti’s first ECM appearance is also his most understated. Dança das Cabeças (Dance of the Heads) was to be a solo album, due to the fact that the Brazilian government had inflated travel expenses for he and his band to the questionable figure of 7000 dollars a head. Gismonti was the only among them able to make the journey, but as fate would have it, he met Nana Vasconcelos quite by accident while in Norway to prepare for this recording. According to Alvaro Neder, when Vasconcelos asked him to describe the concept behind this project, Gismonti told him it was “the history of two boys wandering through a dense, humid forest, full of insects and animals, keeping a 180-feet distance from each other.” It was a history the two musicians shared without articulation, and Vasconcelos immediately agreed to join, thereby bringing another visionary into the label’s fold.

“It sounds just like a rain forest!” Perhaps you have heard this assessment being made in reference to many a New-Age album, sporting lush trees on its cover and layered within with preprogrammed synthesizers and wooden flutes. Dança, by contrast, is as far as one can get from the contrived exotica that haunt our commercial soundscapes. We are fully situated in the acoustic benefits of live musicianship, captured in all their immediacy in ECM’s standard-setting clarity. And so, while the birdlike sounds of Part I do indeed evoke a forest practically dripping with fecundity, it is populated with more than a few brightly colored animals. Like Marion Brown’s Afternoon Of A Georgia Faun, its sound is as deliberate as it is organic. From these canopied beginnings, we get some jangly strums from Gismonti’s guitar, slaloming between frenzied hand drums. Rhythms and melodies build to infectious heights, diving into our blood with every fluted moment. The musicians raise their cries, from which Gismonti spins a free-flowing grace, as if to trace lines of varying distance in a vast topographic map. Vasconcelos returns in all his fullness with drums, maracas, and shakers, while Gismonti’s fingers move on in their quiet persistence. Changes in syncopation and a few helpings of dissonant harmonies enact a skeleton dance of sorts, soaring resolutely into the music’s ritual heart. Gismonti’s classical training shines through in Part II, for which he puts his fingers to keys in a spacious and revelatory stroll through Keith Jarrett territory. From this heartwarming nostalgia, built in arcs with only the occasional angles, Gismonti morphs into a bellowed vocalise and storm of handclaps. He returns to the guitar before closing with another pianistic statement in improvised space.

This remains the Brazilian multi-instrumentalist’s most direct effort. In it, we find him without masks. It is the kind of music that makes one glad to be alive, a breath of clarity in polluted air. Essential for anyone who appreciates what music can bring to the heart, mind, and body.

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