CELESTE: II (1977; 1991)
1) Il Giradino Armonico; 2)
Bassa Marea; 3) Un Mazzo Di Ortiche; 4) Settottavi; 5) All'Ombra Di Un Fungo;
6) La Danza Del Mare; 7) Slancio Dell'Immaginazione; 8) Un'Anima Nell'Universo;
9) Nodissea; 10) Ala Del Pensiero; 11) Lontano Profondo; 12) Il Giardino
Armonico (ripresa).
The unfortunate luck of poor Celeste seems to
have been running out exponentially: where only two years had separated the
recording of their first album from its commercial release (1974 to 1976), the
second album had to wait on the shelf for fourteen years — recorded in 1977, it
did not see the light of day until 1991, by which time the band had, of course,
long ceased to exist. On a technical note, the original CD issue from 1991,
consisting of but four tracks that actually constituted the originally planned
album, was quickly replaced by a much-expanded set that frames these recordings
with a bunch of shorter tracks (1-2 and 7-12) that, if I get this correctly, are
not even properly Celeste, but should rather be credited to Ciro Perrino solo,
with a bunch of additional backing players that may or may not overlap with
the classic lineup of Celeste... not that it really matters, does it?
What really matters is to observe that the
band, despite being so derivative and so «niche-oriented», had undergone a
radical transformation in the years separating 1974 from 1977 — and not in the
kind of direction that most progressive rock bands were taking (towards a more
pop-friendly or arena-ready sound). The key word to describe Celeste was
«pastoral», but only faint echoes of that sound persist in small corners of the
four tracks that constitute the album; actually, the bonus tracks are far more
«Celestian» (Celestial?) in that respect. All of a sudden, the band now puts
its trust in jazzy bass grooves, smooth sax solos, cosmic synth melodies, and a
near-complete lack of vocals (the latter change, in particular, is much
welcome). It's as if somebody told them, «hey guys, you're cool and all, but
too many people just fall asleep at your concerts», and they took it way too
seriously.
The results are not altogether bad, and
repeated listens make me realize that, just as the first album had a certain
unique flavor with its injection of Italian serenity into progressive rock
turbulence, so is their second record also hard to precisely categorize and
pigeonhole. You could call it a jazz-fusion album, but it is not generic: there
is still plenty of folk influence and a lot of «childish» elements, like the
omnipresent vibraphones that make the music far cuddlier than your average
Brand X could ever sound — check out the beginning of ʽSetteottaviʼ for proof;
I doubt I have ever heard that sort of tinkly-innocent vibraphone melody on any
fusion album. And the first part of ʽLa Danza Del Mareʼ is more like free-form
smooth jazz than true fusion, anyway.
The down side is that, unfortunately, this kind
of music requires tons of energy if it really wants to make an
impression — and Celeste already made us suspect that this band is about
anything but energy. So every time they seem to have their minds set on
establishing a tight, fast, complex groove (the bass player is probably the
most dedicated participant here), it ends up disintegrating into an atmospheric
puddle, out of which wobbles a boring sax or flute or keyboard solo. Add to
this the less than perfect production values (ʽAll'Ombra Di Un Fungoʼ, in
particular, sounds like a bootleg quality track — I honestly hope that this was
not the actual version they'd submitted to the record company, or I would have
shelved the results as well), and you can easily understand why Celeste II
does not share the «cult» reputation of its predecessor.
Each of the tracks has its cute, quirky moments
and overall potential, but the way they do go on, there was hardly any need to
extend all of them to mammoth lengths — most of the time is simply given over
to unfocused jamming rather than proper development of the established themes;
and these guys do not have much of a seasoned jazz pro pedigree to genuinely
hope that this unfocused jamming may result in spontaneous magic. Particularly
tedious is the quasi-free-form space jamming in the first part of ʽLa Danza Del
Mareʼ, next to which even early Grateful Dead (far from a favorite of mine)
will seem to possess exemplary inspiration. (The second part, tougher and
funkier, is more listenable in general, but even that one comes and goes
without any particular purpose that I could nail, fading out before it even
begins to make sense).
As for the shorter bonus tracks that are closer
in spirit to the original Celeste, I did not perceive much memorability
there, either; at least they are reasonably short, either as soft jazzy
waltzes with prominent flute parts or as folk-poppy ditties that are still more
about atmosphere than hooks. Not that much to get excited about, either; all in
all, the entire package, at best, qualifies as tasteful background muzak, and I
can see very well why no record company was in any rush to see it on the
market. It does seem funny, though, how this is all extremely accessible and
thoroughly «anti-commercial» at the same time.
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