|
RELEASE YEAR |
0000 |
SUPPORT |
CD |
LABEL |
Via Asiago, 10 |
VOLUME |
1 |
CATALOGUE Nr.. |
TWI CD AS 09 50 |
DOWNLOAD |
€ 10,00 |
BARCODE |
8032732535583 |
PURCHASE |
€ 14,00 |
On 26th January 1960 at 10 pm, on the Secondo Programma Radiofonico (2nd Radio Channel), a programme
called “The Jazz Cup” kicked off. For eight weeks 16 bands played two by two, paired off by a
drawing of lots. For the first time RAI had committed itself to a broad scale Jazz project. Already in the
preceding months Jazz had gone into a state of frenzy: the competition rules drew no distinction between
professionals and amateurs, the young and not so young. Anyone could sign up, no matter what their
genre or their style. The “jazz “specific” nature of the piece would have been accepted or rejected by a
commission of experts. For months, in the scant yet tetchy world of jazz, people spoke of nothing else.
Over 80 bands signed up, the most with a good bit of professional experience behind them, and were
then cut down to 16 after a series of selections in the various RAI studios. These were the final 16: Enrico
Intra Trio (Milan),Quartetto Sergio Mondadori (Bologna), Seconda Roman New Orleans Jazz Band
(Rome), Quintetto di Torino (Turin), Modern Jazz Gang (Rome), Riverside Jazz Band (Milan), Gil Cuppini
Quintet (Milan), Rheno Dixieland Band (Bologna), Bohukus Trio (Turin),Vittorio Paltrinieri e il suo
Complesso (Milan), Amedeo Tommasi Trio (Bologna), Riverside Syncopators Jazz Band (Genoa),
Giampiero Fontana e il suo Complesso (Milan), I Quattro del Sud (Bari), Lazy River Band Society (Asti),
Quintetto Moderno (Udine). “The Jazz Cup” was born out of an idea thought up by Vittorio Zivelli and
Piero Vivarelli, who were already well-known in the worlds of jazz and of modern music. Zivelli, a
Neapolitan, the man who had created the successful programme “Il Discobolo”, or discus thrower, among
the first RAI managers to have spent part of his working career in the USA (in years during which the gap
in terms of radio programmes between Italy and America was truly vast), despite his many intuitions, was
on the point of leaving radio (to which he would have later gone back) to look after the nascent Secondo
Canale or second TV channel. Piero Vivarelli, a director and journalist, was living his frenetic rock and roll
years: he had just written Il tuo bacio è come un rock (Your Kiss is like a Rock and Roll) and shortly after
wrote, always for Adriano Celentano, 24.000 baci (24,000 kisses). At the end of the first phase the jury
gave the impression of having fallen totally apart: fights, accusations of incompetence and technical quibbles
led to inevitable resignations. The jury was nevertheless composed of well-known specialist critics
and musicians of considerable standing. These were its members: GiancarloTestoni, Piero Piccioni, Livio
Cerri, Roberto Nicolosi, Giovanni Attilio Baldi, Salvatore G.Biamonte, Mario Cartoni, Alfredo Luciano
Catalani, Mino Caudana, Angelo Nizza, Piero Umiliani, and its president Angelo D’Angelantonio. The concept
of a tournament should not however lead to the impression that this was a purely competitive event.
Unlike what was to have happened in future, the competing bands were given all the time they wanted,there were no fade outs or cut solos. To this was added the meticulous “cage” set up by the authors,
which meant that each band had to play a piece of their choice (either written by them or someone else),
one “obliged” piece, a one-minute theme on which to improvise and at times even a jam session between
the two competing bands. As is obvious, this was certainly no “Canzonissima” for jazz, but rather an artistic
springboard of considerable importance, indeed, complex in its articulation. Perhaps it was for this reason
that the musicians not only did not protest about the unusual competition but actually showed themselves
to be enthusiastic. The semi-finals gave the following verdict: Quintetto di Torino (92,00), Enrico
Intra Trio (88,90), Gil Cuppini Quintet (85,08), Modern Jazz Gang (83,63). But clearly the match was not
over. Our record presents the four finalists, with a selection of the repertoire they played during the programme,
a programme that fully reflected the Italian jazz climate of that period, basically divided between
“traditionalists” and “modernists”. The former, indefatigable supporters of Dixieland and the New Orleans
style, were thoroughly organised and could count on the strong support of very keen fans who followed
them everywhere by bus. The “trads” wore Montgomery style overcoats and had crew-cuts and for them
jazz had ended in Chicago. The modernists were split into two camps: the followers of the West Coast,
or the so called Californian jazz, a prevalently white genre, and those who had instead chosen hard-bop,
a style that gave a new slant to its Afro-American origins and that had its heart in New York. Perhaps a
rather primitive concept of jazz, based on empty neologisms – typical the incorrect translation of the terms
“hot” and “cool” into Italian as “caldo” and “freddo”– but in effect full of appeal and frenetic enthusiasm.
What won in the end was modern jazz, a term in effect used in Italy alone, to indicate all the styles that
had their moment from be bop on, and thus as of the mid forties. This the final verdict: Gil Cuppini Quintet
(96,27), Quintetto di Torino (94,63), Enrico Intra Trio (90,77), Modern Jazz Gang (88,33). The hard bop
played by Cuppini, at the time the best known percussionist in Italy, prevailed upon the Californian style
of the quintet led by Dino Piana. Yet, styles aside, the “Jazz Cup” imposed itself for its aim to bring to the
general public a type of music that until then had remained in the wings of radio’s palimpsests. Naturally,
the polemics that followed were not few, and went on for months in the specialised press. The concern
of jazz lovers – and indeed of the selfsame jury – was fundamentally that of evaluation, which did not take
the different genres into account nor who played them. It was the competing bands that in effect proposed
what they would play, alternating original and standard pieces, but perhaps the true problem was
in effect in the diverse nature of the jazz players themselves. The bands were a mix of pros, who for reasons
of survival almost always alternated jazz with modern music and stints in nightclubs (some even at the circus), and amateurs, in other words those who, skills aside, had other jobs. Not to mention the
plethora of musicians from RAI orchestras, whom jazz players snobbishly saw as “employees” (perhaps
because they were regularly employed by RAI on open-ended contracts), despite the fact that those
orchestras had the best Italian soloists. The programme, with its formal rigour, including the presentations
by Brunella Tocci and the embarrassment of the musicians, always somewhat uncomfortable when they
spoke, harks back to an unforgettable moment of Italian jazz. An authentic item that the true lover of this
genre cannot do without, that shows how those musicians were ready to put themselves on the line, without
a care. Something that would be entirely unthinkable in today’s jazz scenario. The repertoire, recordings
and level of jazz proposed show how and in what way Italian jazz was about to become highly popular,
thanks to the contribution of young and good musicians, luckily for the most still active. |