The Great Hunger (Opening) Enrique Nicolas Noviello

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2020

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
18.09.2020

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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  • 1 In Scena (Opening) 03:18
  • 2 Derrumbe 03:36
  • 3 Money 04:00
  • 4 El Belgrano 04:00
  • 5 Urquiza 04:08
  • 6 In Scena (Solo) 03:22
  • 7 Viejo Zorro 03:38
  • 8 Tiburon 05:16
  • 9 In Scena (Waltz) 03:44
  • 10 Sativa 04:16
  • Total Runtime 39:18

Info zu The Great Hunger (Opening)

The Great Hunger is not so much an album as a vivid experience: a live soundtrack in which we move between rooms populated by cabaret acts, rap poets and mesmerising musical echoes of Latin America. On this journey, our guide is maverick composer Enrique Nicolas Noviello, Argentinian saxophone maestro from the avant-garde tango band El Juntacadavares, who’s been sharpening his teeth on the underground gipsy jazz scene of Antwerp since 2001.

The set begins with “In Scena” - a smoky downtown bar, the crowd idly chatting over cocktails. Mellow tango flavours the night, getting those toes tapping while the ghost of Jelly Roll Morton drifts like smoke overhead. A door opens at the back of the bar into the “Derrumbe” room, an edgy Rasta smoking den, where dub bass contends with a bandoneon (concertina) and a mournful pianist.

Rapper Azeem takes the stage for “Money”, accompanied by a full brass band and Broadway singer Junior Akwety, hollering his guts out against the spirit of capitalism. Azeem’s flow struts an easy line between poetry and pimpin’. Standing out from the instrumental soundtrack vibe of the album, “Money” is a timeless anti-capitalist vocal anthem, its bitter protest delivered with a rich musicality drawn from the 1930s and 2020s in equal measure.

The bandoneon is back for “Belgrano”, a mournful homage to a lost leader or perhaps those lost at sea; but there is no nationalism here, just a haunting sense of things past. Rattling drums and planes passing overhead inflect “Urquiza” with a tight funk urgency, ratcheting up the tension. The melancholic strings of “In Scena (Solo)” begins as an evocative neo-classical composition before morphing into a smooth, introspective jazz number – the soundtrack to a bittersweet romance.

The stoned tango of “Viejo Zorro” is kept on its feet by Noviello’s virtuoso saxophone and blunted surf-rock guitar. This moody vibe continues through into “Tiburon” where heavily tremolo-ed guitar spars with glitchy concertina notes, all underpinned with the insistent and edgy tango jazz drumming.

For the last reprise of “La Scena (Waltz)” we are taken on another extraordinary journey through orchestral strings to the Latin American dancehalls of generations long-gone, before ending on a joyously upbeat, romantic finale. “Sativa” rounds off the set, with squelchy synth bass and drifting tango melodies sending us into deep space like Gotan Project filtered through a kilo of high-grade weed.

Exquisite live studio production conveys the full range and beauty of the instruments. The arrangement is tight and masterful, belying Noviello’s lack of formal music education. Sometimes haunting, sometimes edgy, often romantic and always virtuoso, this is an electronically-infused, highly-eclectic jazz soundtrack to a David Lynch noir film that is still to be made.




Enrique Nicolas Noviello
is an Argentinian composer, producer and saxophone maestro from the avant-garde tango band El Juntacadavares, who’s been sharpening his teeth on the underground gipsy jazz scene of Antwerp since 2001.

Exquisite live studio production conveys the full range and beauty of Enrique´s music and the instruments he plays. The arrangement is tight and masterful, belying Noviello’s lack of formal music education. Sometimes haunting, sometimes edgy, often romantic and always virtuoso, this is an electronically-infused, highly-eclectic jazz soundtrack to a David Lynch noir film that is still to be made.

“Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina. I started playing music at the late age of 18. Slowly it became my priority, my love, my obsession. I quitted the University, ended my relationship, moved to another country, learned new languages... and the music remained there.

It's been a journey of more than 15 years since the first note I played. I have the opportunity to travel and work with outstanding artists and meet fabulous people, to learn from them, to appreciate the luck I have, by finding something that gives meaning to my life a vocation.

I finally decided to put it all together here, and hope to find more amazing people to share new musical adventures!“



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