“If someone asked me to define this album,
I would say it was a collection of songs linked together by a story. But
unlike my other albums, it doesn’t belong to a time in the past.
It speaks about me as I am now, my life, the things around me, my piano
(which I have nicknamed “Tagore”), my children Jessica and
Leo, the orange kilim that brightens up the living room, the clouds sailing
slowly across the sky, the sunlight coming in the window, the music I
am listening to, the books I read and don’t read, my memories, my
friends and loved ones. "
ludovico einaudi
“Se qualcuno mi chiedesse di questo album, gli direi che è
una raccolta di canzoni legate tra loro da una storia. Ma a differenza
degli altri miei album non appartiene a un tempo remoto, parla di me adesso,
della mia vita, delle cose che mi circondano. Del mio piano che ho soprannominato
“Tagore”, dei miei figli Jessica e Leo, del tappeto kilim
arancione che illumina il soggiorno, delle nuvole che passano lente come
navi nel cielo, del sole che entra dalla finestra, della musica che ascolto,
dei libri che leggo e di quelli che non leggo, dei miei ricordi, dei miei
amici e delle persone che amo.”
ludovico einaudi
latest news
05 September – UK On Sunday 5th Sept between 9 and 11pm Classic FM will broadcast
Ludovico Einaudi Live at the Villa Manin which features several compositions
from his new CD Una Mattina.
30 August– UK Una Mattina is Classic FM's CD of the week. Host Simon Bates
says, “Einaudi's music has become a firm favourite on Classic FM
and here's a selection of haunting new pieces to keep his fans more than
satisfied.”
26 August– UK Una Mattina is No.1 on the amazon.co.uk
pre-release Classical chart.
biography of ludovico einaudi
The music of composer/pianist Ludovico Einaudi has been described as
minimalist, classical, ambient, contemporary and deeply touching…
the welcome sound of stillness in a hectic world.
Week after week, his hauntingly beautiful and evocative music has kept
him among the best-selling and most requested recording artists (in
the UK and Italy in particular).
Einaudi has just finished the recording of his latest album, Una Mattina,
for Decca.
Speaking of his new work, he says: “If someone asked me about
this album, I would say it is a collection of songs linked together
by a story. But unlike my other albums, it doesn’t belong to a
time in the past. It speaks about me as I am now, my life, the things
around me. My piano (which I have nicknamed “Tagore”), my
children Jssessica and Leo, the orange kilim carpet that brightens up
the living room, the clouds sailing slowly across the sky, the sunlight
coming through the window, the music I listen to, the books I read and
don’t read, my memories, my friends and the people I love”.
Una Mattina features Einaudi on solo piano and also includes three pieces
with piano and cello. There is a general sense of light in the album
that you can feel over the entire recording. The sound of the piano
is very pure and warm, with a melodic quality that shines through the
whole album as a spiritual guide, like a haunting and mesmerizing human
voice.
It was recorded with the composer’s new piano, a Steinway B-211,
at the Piccolo Teatro of Milan, where, after the setting of the microphones
with the sound engineer, Einaudi alone recorded, edited and produced
the entire album.
The solo piano pieces are all extremely melodic, some of them have the
quintessence of a song (Leo, Dolce droga, Come un fiore, Questa volta),
others have strong, energetic, harmonic and dynamic crescendos (Ora,
Nuvole nere, Nuvole bianche), and there is also an improvised piece
(Ancora), the longest in the album, which is a sort of variation on
a theme that comes back with different shapes and very subtle voicings.
In the three pieces with the cello, there is an interesting mix between
the two instruments, where the cello subtly harmonizes the pop melody
of the piano (Resta con me), or sings (DNA), or where they alternate
each other (A fuoco).
einaudi, the man & his musical beginnings…
Einaudi himself is a classically trained musician and a charming and
fascinating man. His rich family history includes a Grandfather who
was a composer, a family vineyard and even a past President of Italy.
Born in Turin (1955), the pianist and composer Ludovico Einaudi trained
at the Conservatorio in Milan, then continued his studies under the
guidance of Luciano Berio.
“My time with Berio was more workshop than study, since he immediately
involved me in the projects he was working on, such as musical transcription
tasks. I got first-hand experience, though still a student, and I have
very happy memories of that time, and of our relationship.” This
is how Einaudi remembers the celebrated composer of the minimalist avant-garde,
to whom he paid homage in 1997 with a concerto for trumpet and orchestra.
Einaudi’s music began to assume its own unmistakeable character
towards the end of the 1980s, as he absorbed elements derived from popular
music. Around this time he first became involved in collaborative ventures
in theatre, video and dance. These included compositions for the ballets
Sul filo d’Orfeo (1984), The Wild Man (1990) and The Emperor (1991);
Time-out (1988), a dance-theatre performance created in conjunction
with the writer Andrea De Carlo and staged in Italy, Japan and the United
States by the American ISO Dance Theatre company; Salgari (Per terra
e per mare) (1995), an opera/ballet commissioned by the Arena di Verona
with texts by Emilio Salgari, Rabindranath Tagore, Charles Duke Jr,
first performed at the Arena with choreography by Daniel Ezralow and
sets by the American Jerome Sirlin; and E.A. Poe (1997), conceived as
a sound track for films from the silent era.
einaudi’s career as a soloist…
The album Le onde (1996, BMG), was a turning point in Ludovico Einaudi’s
career – his first real work as a soloist. It is true that Stanze
(1990) had included 16 of his compositions, but they had been performed
by Cecilia Chailly, one of the first musicians to take up the challenge
of the electric harp. With Le onde, Einaudi put together a cycle of
ballades for piano (performed by the author) inspired by Virginia Woolf’s
novel The Waves, in which the waves are a symbol of life itself.
“If it were a story, it would be set at the seaside, by a very
long beach. A beach without beginning or end,” writes Einaudi.
“It would tell the story of a man who walks along the shore and
maybe never meets anyone. Now and again, his eyes light on some piece
of flotsam or jetsam, the footprints of a crab, or a solitary gull.
The landscape consists only of sand, sky, a few clouds, the sea. All
that changes are the waves, always the same but always different, smaller,
larger, shorter, longer.”
The recording was released a couple of years later in the United Kingdom,
eventually receiving acclaim from general public and critics alike,
with a little help from Classic FM.
The long-awaited sequel arrived in 1999. Entitled Eden Roc (BMG). “In
a way, it explores in greater depth the themes raised in my earlier
works, Stanze and Le onde. It takes a stage further the experiment of
defining a kind of suite, creating shorter pieces, akin to instrumental
songs, but always linked to an overall project.”
Eden Roc is a recording with obvious ‘inner tensions’, less
static and freer than earlier works. Einaudi collaborated with the Armenian
Djivan Gasparijan, a past master of the duduk (a kind of small oboe
made of apricot wood) “to emphasise the popular (and traditional)
roots of areas such as the Caucasus or the Balkans, which are more closely
connected than one would think with the Mediterranean”.
The end of 2001 saw the release of I Giorni (BMG) – a dozen pieces
for solo piano, composed as deliberate snapshots of the creativity of
a musician who has achieved full freedom of expression. They constitute
“a kind of musical thinking process and/or a spiritual piece of
embroidery”, inspired by his travels in Africa.
“One day, a little while ago, during a trip to Mali, I was travelling
by car with a friend, Toumani Diabate, a virtuoso performer on the kora
(the typical Malian harp), when suddenly I heard the most enchanting
music. An ancient melody from the thirteenth century. When I got home
and was making my new recording, I began to improvise with that sweet,
melancholy music in mind, and so I fought off my nostalgia for Africa.”
This was the genesis of an album involving a long process of reflection.
(“When I compose, I need to improvise,” explains Einaudi,
“but also to meditate for a long time on what I am writing. I
progress on two apparently antithetical levels: I create a great diversity
of styles then, at a later stage, I review it all with a rational ear.”).
The result was yet another performance of great emotional intensity,
quite unconnected with the concept of a sound track.
“Five years after Le onde, I again decided to create a solo work
for piano; after experimenting with various things, I wanted to get
back to the solitary dimension. It is a kind of suite of pieces in the
form of an instrumental song. Although each piece has a meaning of its
own, they are linked by a general idea of musical accountability and
by melodic, thematic and harmonic references. You need to listen to
the whole album to get the full message.”
Einaudi returned to Mali – to a spot near the oasis of Essakane,
about seventy kilometres from Timbuktu – in January 2003, to take
part in the third Desert Festival, a kind of Woodstock of world music,
and a celebration of the culture of the Tuareg people of the Sahara.
This time, he was invited back to Africa by Ballaké Sissoko (another
Malian kora virtuoso), and with his soft, caressing spirals on the piano
“cast a small African spell”. An extract from that live
performance, Camels, will be included in the forthcoming recording of
the Desert Festival (Triban Union). In 2004, Einaudi returned the favour,
inviting Sissoko to Italy for a series of live performances on the art
of improvisation.
In 2003, all Einaudi’s concerts were a sell-out, in Italy and
abroad. Certainly this was true in Great Britain, where Echoes (The
Einaudi Collection) – a compilation of hits from his first four
solo albums – had come out in the meantime and sold over 80,000
copies. In 2004, the British public gave him standing ovations and the
critics greeted his performances with enthusiasm.
2003 was also the year of his double live album La Scala: Concert 03
03 03, a recording of a concert he gave at the Teatro degli Arcimboldi
in Milan: an intense encounter between chamber and popular music, seasoned
with hints of his many successful sound tracks.
einaudi performing live…
For Einaudi, it is now a time to take stock: “About ten years
ago, after many years composing for various instrumental groups, I began
to feel a desire to play my own music in live settings. Being restricted
to writing in isolation in a studio seemed too abstract and distant
a way of working. I felt the need for a more immediate relationship
with both music and audience. I needed to check out personally the meaning
of what I was doing, find a direct channel of communication with the
public, be at the centre of the magic and emotion that can be created
only during a live performance. Basically, these were my reasons for
beginning to do concerts, rather in the spirit of someone singing his
own songs. In the piano, I have found a home that I feel I have built
with my own hands, designing the rooms one by one and carefully choosing
the materials and furnishings, with freedom to include the essence of
all my past experiences and the things I have loved.”
When asked whether there is a crossover musical trend in Italy, Einaudi
replies without hesitation: “Rather than trends, I prefer to think
in terms of people. Music is lived by human beings, not by movements.
It is not enough to speak of instrumental music. Today I feel closer
to a group like Coldplay than to Wim Mertens.”
As he often stresses, his music and his curiosity are stimulated by
a constant searching – for moods and notes. This is confirmed
by his current project, renamed Transient: a live performance in which
keyboard and laptop technology underline the projected images of photographer
Armin Linke.
einaudi’s soundtracks
Ludovico Einaudi also has an intense and fruitful career composing music
for the cinema. He began with two films made by Michele Sordillo: Da
qualche parte in città (1994) and Acquario (1996), for which
he was awarded the Grolla d’oro for best sound track. He continued
in 1998 with Treno di panna, the only film made by Andrea De Carlo.
In the same year, he composed the sound track for Giorni dispari by
Dominick Tambasco, then making his debut, while some extracts from Le
onde (Le onde, Ombre and Canzone popolare) were included in Aprile by
Nanni Moretti.
2000 was a breakthrough year. As well as collaborating with Antonello
Grimaldi on Un delitto impossibile, he composed the original sound track
for Giuseppe Piccioni’s Fuori del mondo, a film nominated for
an Oscar, for which, in 2002, Einaudi won the coveted ‘Echo klassik’
award in Germany.
Einaudi’s collaboration with Piccioni was repeated the following
year with Luce dei miei occhi, judged as having the best sound track
at the 2002 Italian music awards. He also composed the music for Francesca
Comencini’s Le parole di mio padre and Maria Iliou’s Alexandria,
both of which were released in 2001.
2002 will be remembered for the sound track of Zhivago, a television
film based on Boris Pasternak’s famous novel, which was directed
by Giacomo Campiotti, produced in the United Kingdom and broadcast all
over the world.
It is worth mentioning that La linea scura (a piece from Le onde) is
included in the sound track of Fame chimica, a film made independently
in Milan in 1993 by Paolo Vari and Antonio Bocola. Einaudi’s most
recent sound track, for Roberto Andò’s Sotto falso nome,
came out at the beginning of 2004 and won the prize for Best Filmscore
at the Avignon Festival in France.
Cat. 475 629-2 Album available
Sept 6 in the UK,
Sept 24 in Italy.
Other release dates to follow.