Inventio by Jean-Louis Matinier & Marco Ambrosini

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Jean-Louis Matinier & Marco Ambrosini
Inventio
ECM Records (www.ecmrecords.com)

Although French accordionist Jean-Louis Matinier and Marco Ambrosini, Italian virtuoso of the nyckelharpa (a Swedish traditional instrument that is something of a cross between hurdy-gurdy and vielle), have existed as a duo since 2008, it took a period of refinement and an invitation to record for ECM Records in 2013 before their music at last saw the digital light of day. Anyone who has followed the career of Anouar Brahem in the 21st century will have encountered Matinier alongside the Tunisian oudist on 2002's Le Pas Du Chat Noir and 2006's Le Voyage De Sahar. Ambrosini is recognized as a leading proponent of the nyckelharpa and has carried that instrument in fresh directions across a varied terrain of recordings. Matinier has elsewhere characterized his musical relationship with Ambrosini as “a total dialogue,” and the description could hardly be more appropriate. They complete each other's sentences.

"Wiosna"

The first strains of “Wiosna,” among the lion's share of tracks penned by Matinier, immediately recall another duo: Argentine bandoneonista Dino Saluzzi and German cellist Anja Lechner. Both partnerships are savvy in terms of rhythm and atmosphere, morphing from tears into triumph at a moment's notice. And yet, if Saluzzi and Lechner could be said to treat the listener like a canvas, Matinier and Ambrosini treat the listener like a movie screen on which to project moving images. This analogic difference comes about through both a distinct timbral palette and an unprecedented program. It is virtuosic and gorgeous all the same, but in its own way indivisible.

"Taïga"

Matinier's writing comprises a folk music all its own. Whether in the cartographic flybys of “Hommage” and “Kochanie Moje” or in the briefer passages of “Taïga” and “Balinese,” an underlying pulse finds consummation in the musicians' synergy, which is so seamless that it's sometimes difficult to tell where one instrument ends and the other begins. Even in Matinier's two solo tracks, the nyckelharpa's droning spirit lingers. Of those solos, “Szybko” is particularly moving and brings to mind the flute playing of Guo Yue. Like the “Siciliènne” (by accordionist-composer André Astier) that closes the album, his are fleeting portraits of places out of time.

"Szybko"

Also out of time are Ambrosini's own compositions, through which the nyckelharpa's sympathetic strings resonate like a life force. His “Basse Dance” best exploits the duo's interlocking sound and might just as well have been lifted from a Renaissance manuscript. In this context the nyckelharpa sounds for all like a viola da gamba and signals the titular dance with a locomotive pulse. His “Tasteggiata” and “Tasteggiata 2” are likewise steam-driven, chugging through a full spectrum of color.

"Basse Dance"

The album's circle rounds out with segments plucked from a tangle of Baroque repertoire by Giovanni Pergolisi, Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber, and J. S. Bach. A “Presto” from the latter's g-minor sonata for solo violin is reborn at Ambrosini's fingertips, which imbue this familiar piece with an ancient air, while the “Inventio 4” from Bach's Two- and Three-part Inventions yields not only the album's title but also its most luminescent notecraft. Folk touches from Ambrosini again pull this music into a deeper origin myth. Such integrations make the Baroque selections something much more than obligatory nods to an established canon. Their placement stirs the waters with a certain depth of interpretation that links them to a chain across borders. - Tyran Grillo

Find the artists online: www.inventio-duo.eu

 

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