Su Mimmi non si spara! contrasts moments
of ethereal beauty with visceral aggression, aching lyricism with abstract
noise, whisper-quiet minimalism with rock-inspired power. His expansive attack
on the cello incorporates such disparate methods as alternative tunings,
percussive bowing, exotic preparations and electronic distortions. At its core
is the tension between the cerebral invention of Guerri's boundary-stretching
technique and the passionate expression he conveys to his audience.
"I think that my music should be understandable to a
child," Guerri says. "When you play solo the only other person
involved is the listener, so I always try to be communicative to the
audience."
Guerri doesn't exaggerate when he hopes that his music can
reach even a child's ears. The title of his new album references his infant
son, Mimmi; translated as "Don't shoot Mimmi," it refers to a water
gun assault on the child by his older brother. Working intently on his music at
home, Guerri heard his wife shouting out the titular phrase, and was
immediately struck by its inherent contradictions: his son was playing lovingly
with his sibling while at the same time miming an act of violence. (A second
piece named for his youngest, "Mimmi Resisti," finds a groove in the
constantly warring relationship between male siblings).
"I thought this idea, of a child naturally being both
bad and good, went to the very roots of man," Guerri explains. " I
want it also to go to the roots of my music."
His own children aren't the only youthful inspiration that
Guerri draws upon. For the last two decades, alongside his evolving approach to
solo cello, he has also worked as an educator at a Bolonga hospital, working
with teens dealing with mental disorders. Music makes up a significant part of
his outreach. "It's truly impressive to make music with these young
people," he marvels. "The intensity of it makes really magical things
happen. Music can change your life, and many of them need their life to change."
The major change in Guerri's life came just after he
graduated from the Conservatorio di Musica Bruno Maderna in his native Cesena,
Italy. It was then that he attended a workshop led by improvising cellist
Tristan Honsinger, whose collaborators include such pioneers as the ICP
Orchestra, Cecil Taylor, Derek Bailey and Steve Lacy. Through Honsinger the
young cellist discovered free improvisation and forever left behind the rigors
of the traditional classical repertoire.
Since then Guerri has performed in a rich variety of other
contexts, from electronica to avant-garde rock music and free jazz, working
with such names as William Parker, Butch Morris, Silvia Bolognesi, Gianluca
Petrella, Fabrizio Spera, Ches Smith and Vincenzo Vasi. He has collaborated
extensively with Honsiger as well as Carla Bozulich, playing in her band
Evangelista and touring with her as a duo. He also co-founded the duos Nagel
(with Alberto Fiori) and Nestor Makhno (with Nicola Guazzaloca).
Guerri has also worked extensively in the avant-garde theater,
including with Teatrino Clandestino, Teatrino Giullare, and most intensively
with the actor-director Chiara Guidi of the Societas Raffaello Sanzio. With
Guidi the cellist has undertaken an ongoing, multi-year exploration of Dante's
Divine Comedy, the characters of which inspired three of the pieces on Guerri's
new album: the tense, vivid "Ciacco," the dramatic
"Minosse," and the stunning overture, "Lucy" (short for
Dante's Lucia - a name that means "bringer of light," an apt
descriptor of the opener).
Following the overture, the album shifts to the shimmering
overtones of the title track, which Guerri was developing when he overheard his
wife's admonishment to their children. Taking such inspiration from the
vagaries of the moment is key to Guerri's process. Most of the music on Su
Mimmi non si spara! was born out of improvisation, then shaped into a
through-composed work.
In contrast to his earlier albums, there is no improvisation
on Su Mimmi non si spara! Instead, Guerri sought to eliminate the unconscious
clichés that often creep into supposedly "free" playing by recording,
examining and combining his impromptu explorations for their most sui generis
moments, then crafting them into pieces bursting with invention and
originality.
As Guerri poetically describes the process in his liner
notes, "For the last few years I have taken this path. I walk on it
slowly, paying attention to the details. I search under the fallen leaves,
collecting tiny fragments of the world. I keep them. I assign a role and an
order to each and every one of them. They often are small fragments emanating a
wild scent, seeds of life that stick to me and that I carry with me wherever I
go."
Su Mimmi non si spara! is thus the culmination of two
decades of research into the solo cello, along with extensive performing and
study into a diverse range of music. Though he hasn't performed classical music
since his conservatory days, his private study of Bach is one of the
inspirations behind his music.
"Study is the point from which everything starts,"
he asserts. "I spend a lot of time studying techniques, so usually
improvisation comes from those studies. I study something, and then I start to
improvise. Maybe I don't find anything, so I return to my studies and try again."
For instance: "Your Beginning," one of two pieces
revisited from Guerri's solo debut FromYour Beginning to My [Ha]nd, employs the
alternate tuning (with the A string tuned to G) as Bach's fifth Cello Suite.
The other piece from that album, My [Ha]nd, was originally written for Guerri's
collaboration with Bozulich. The piece transforms the sound of the cello via
the use of guitar pedals, conjuring tones that evoke a steel pan or a heavy
metal guitar.
Both "Viola" and "Medusa" also make
evocative use of alternative tunings (there are a number of them throughout the
album). By changing the relation of the strings to one another, Guerri
discovers strange new intervals and intriguingly rich harmonic mysteries that
he can delve deeply into. "Paper" is self-explanatory: the textural
passage that opens the piece is the result of a long piece of paper threaded
through the cello's strings, which are further altered via metal curtain clips
clamped to them, creating a percussive rattle.
"AFK" is one of those acronyms familiar to those
used to living their lives mainly through screens; it stands for "Away
From Keyboard" and is used to indicate those rare moments when one is not
playing a game or sharing one's most intimate thoughts, a notion with which
Guerri is all too familiar working with disaffected teens during his day job.
As these descriptions indicate, there is a dazzling spectrum
of sonic invention to be discovered in Su Mimmi non si spara! The music grows
and shifts in unexpected directions within a single piece, even more so over
the course of this category-resistant album.
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