From their relaxed, conversational interpretation of the
poignant ballad "Old Folks" to their swinging treatment of "On
Green Dolphin Street" to new Ambrosetti originals like his buoyantly
swinging "Silli's Waltz" and the burning "Silli's Long
Wave" (both named for his wife of 22 years) and his tango-flavored
"Milonga," Long Waves stands as a crowning achievement in the long
and storied career of the esteemed trumpeter-flugelhornist-composer.
Jazz has been a part of Ambrosetti's DNA since he was a
child. Born in Lugano on December 10, 1941, he inherited a love of swinging
music from his father Flavio Ambrosetti, an accomplished jazz saxophonist who
founded the first jazz club in his hometown, organized the first jazz festival
in Lugano and also played opposite Charlie Parker at the 1949 Paris Jazz
Festival.
Though he studied classical piano from age nine, Ambrosetti
eventually picked up trumpet at age 17. And while he may have patterned himself
after Clifford Brown and Lee Morgan in his early years, the single biggest
influence on his now signature singing quality on the trumpet and flugelhorn
was Miles Davis. "Miles sometimes was playing just three notes but with so
much intensity, and especially when he was playing a ballad," he noted.
"So from listening to Miles I learned about stretching a note when you
play a melody. Instead of playing the notes shorter or staccato, you stretch
the notes out like you're really singing. And I think I can express my feelings
more if I really cry that note."
In 1966, at age 24, Ambrosetti won a prestigious
international jazz competition in Vienna directed by pianist Friedrich Gulda.
With a jury consisting of Cannonball Adderley, Art Farmer, Jay Jay Johnson, Joe
Zawinul, Ron Carter and Mel Lewis, Franco ended up outranking fellow trumpeters
Randy Brecker, Claudio Roditi and Tomas Stanko for the first prize. The
following year, he played his first concert in the United States, performing in
his father's quintet, the Flavio Ambrosetti All-Stars, at the 1967 Monterey
Jazz Festival. Through the '70s, he led his own groups and also toured with the
George Gruntz Concert Jazz Band. During the '80s and '90s, he performed
concerts and made TV appearances throughout Europe while recording most of his
projects in New York City with such esteemed sidemen as pianists Hal Galper,
Tommy Flanagan, Geri Allen and Kenny Kirkland, saxophonists Phil Woods, Michael
Brecker, Steve Coleman and Greg Osby, bassists Dave Holland, Buster Williams
and Michael Formanek, drummers Billy Hart and Billy Drummond. His 1993 album,
Live at the Blue Note, featured tenor saxophonist Seamus Blake, pianist Kenny
Barron, bassist Ira Coleman and drummer Victor Lewis.
Ambrosetti's 2001 album, Grazie Italia, was a collection of
beloved Italian folk and popular tunes, from "Volare" to "Roma Non
Fa Stupida" to Bruno Martino's "Estate." As he said of that
beloved project, "Italy is my culture but I'm Swiss, so I was thanking
Italy for giving me this kind of gift." In 2008, he appeared at Quincy
Jones' 75th birthday celebration at the Montreux Jazz Festival, performing a
sublime rendition of "My Ship" (recreating the Gil Evans arrangement
from 1957's Miles Ahead) and a soulful muted trumpet reading of
"Summertime" (recreating the Evans-Davis collaboration from 1959's
Porgy And Bess). His 2015 Enja release, After the Rain, was a heartfelt tribute
to John Coltrane that featured alto saxophonist Greg Osby, pianist Dado Maroni,
bassist Buster Williams, drummer Terri Lyne Carrington and his son Gianluca on
soprano sax. In 2017, Ambrosetti marked the milestone of his 75th birthday by
inviting an all-star cast of friends and colleagues to record Cheers. Pianist
Kenny Barron, bassist Williams, drummers DeJohnette and Carrington, pianists
Caine, Maroni and Antonio Faraòi, saxophonist Osby, guitarist Scofield and
fellow trumpeter and longtime friend Randy Brecker were among the participants
in that gala New York session.
Ambrosetti's debut on Unit Records was 2018's lavish
orchestral project, The Nearness of You, with strings conducted by Massimo
Nunzi and brass and woodwinds conducted by Tonino Battista. That album, which
included gorgeous renditions of Kurt Weill's "My Ship," Antonio
Carlos Jobim's "Luiza" and Hoagy Carmichael's title track, also
featured Franco's son Gianluca on soprano sax. That same year, the trumpeter
received the Swiss Jazz Award presented at the Jazz Ascona Festival in
Switzerland. In his autobiography, Two Roads, Both Taken, Ambrosetti addressed
the issue of juggling careers as jazz trumpeter and industrialist. "Music
won me over right away," he wrote, "whereas, the business activity
took a few decades to seduce me."
While Ambrosetti decided to pursue his family's
multi-million-dollar business for decades, he never put his trumpet on the
shelf. "I would practice every day through the years and I still practice
every day," he said. "Trumpet is an instrument that you have to
practice every day, at least half an hour, or you lose your chops. So I do
manage to play every day of my life." He pours a lifetime of experience
into every note on Long Waves, pushed to some dramatic heights by his stellar
crew of seasoned veterans in Scofield, Caine, Colley and DeJohnette.
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