29 May 2013

Paolo Tofani & Claudio Rocchi - Un Gusto Superiore (Italy, 1980)


This is somewhat to continue in the vein of the liminal musical space between 70s prog and 80s AOR audible in the Eskaton and Trevor Swadling posts. Here we have a solid and strange adult-rock album recorded by two legends of Italian prog: Paolo Tofani, the guitarist from Area, and Claudio Rocchi the bassist from Stormy Six. Tofani and Rocchi each pursued increasingly experimental solo projects towards the end of the seventies: the psychedelic cut-ups of Rocchi's Rocchi and the electroacoustic compositions of both Rocchi's Suoni di Frontiera and Tofani's Indicazioni. The strangeness of this collaborative effort lies partly in its normalcy: that after such far-out experiments, these two friends would turn towards traditional song-forms, harmonies, and instrumentation.

Because of the complications of the communal creative process, bands are never able to completely wipe the slate clean and start anew. Anyone who has composed music as part of a band knows how decisions are made that no individual member would/could ever make—and which are often the "right" decisions. When a musician breaks away from a band to do a solo album, that album is likely to be something original, innovative, or adventurous compared to the band's creative progression. This does not imply that solo albums are better, just that they should be seen as the expression of repressed creative urges that don't find their way into a band's musical development. Tofani's Indicazioni is the perfect example of this. Area were one of the most adventurous Italian prog bands, but there was no way they would be able to make the communal decision to make such an experimental record. Towards the end of the 70s, I've found that prog bands tend to continue in more or less comfortable musical territory, making less drastic alterations to their sound and style. The solo efforts from members of prog bands around this same time are often where you'll find the more avant-garde and experimental developments happening.

With this record Tofani and Rocchi—working collaboratively, but not as a band, with an established musical style to consider—make another drastic shift, towards conventional rock songwriting. As with most cases of prog-to-AOR conversions, there is a heavy presence of progressive ghosts amid the 4/4 rhythms. Laced with flashy synths and compelling harmonies, the songs refuse to slip into banal formulas. It is easy to dismiss this album as a "commercial" effort, but this notion is disproved by the heavy Krishna vibes permeating the album—culminating in the final song, a long and repetitive Krishna chant with sitar and guitar—which certainly weren't included to sell albums. Rocchi and Tofani both joined the Hare Krishnas during the late-seventies, I think, and Rocchi was apparently living in a Krishna commune when this record was released. The influence of Krishna doctrine on the lyrics and artwork of this record adds to its interest, further complicating the simple surface of these humble songs.

Unfortunately the sound quality of this rip (originally posted on Mutant Sounds back in 2007) is pretty bad. The sound resemble that of the Eskaton post—like recorded off a VHS. This one's real fuzzy, but if you're favorably disposed to lo-fi sounds you'll still appreciate it. (A nicer rip would be appreciated if anyone wants to link one in the comments...)

Paolo Tofani & Claudio Rocchi - Un Gusto Superiore
LP, ISKCON Records, 1980

1  Jaya Srila Gurudeva Bhagavan
2  O Sei Parte Del Problema O Sei Parte Della Soluzione
3  Dio

4  La Macellazione
5  Un Gusto Superiore
6  Introduzione
7  Muoiono

8  Jiv Jago

Link


"Matrix / Runout (Runout Groove Side A): KC 108003 S1=1 520 1980 HARE=KRSNA=CUTTING=BY=EUGENIO=BRAMBILLA=HARE=KRSNA=
Matrix / Runout (Runout Groove Side B): KC 108003 S2=1 520 1980 HARE=KRSNA=HARE=KRSNA=KRSNA=KRSNA=HARE=HARE=HARE=RAMA=HARE=RAMA=RAMA=HARE=HARE="

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