Nocturnes
          see track listing below review
          Giorgio Mirto (guitar) 
          rec. November 2011 and January 2012, Casa Sonora studios, Grugliasco, 
          Italy. DDD. 
          BRILLIANT CLASSICS 9258 [63:10]  
        
	     
          Imagine a room lit by a fireplace. It is dark, but in a cozy not 
            scary way. The fire dances and the shadows move and form weird images 
            and shapes on the walls. The entire room is filled by the sound of 
            a guitar. This sound is remarkably resonant. Every note seems to create 
            a broad halo around it; these linger in the air and merging create 
            haunting harmonies. The music is not familiar but beautiful. Each 
            piece has a different face and makes a different impression: the many 
            shades of the evening mood. 
              
            These are all Nocturnes in that they create a nocturnal atmosphere, 
            but without a nod to Chopin or Field. Actually, musically they are 
            much closer to Villa-Lobos - think, for example, of the Brazilian 
            composer’s five Preludes for guitar. There is no sadness, but 
            a dreamy relaxation: you come home tired, you sit in a comfortable 
            armchair, submerge into the twilight world and watch the play of the 
            shadows. The recording is very close and resonant, which practically 
            puts the listener inside the sound and increases this personal connection. 
            
              
            Giorgio Mirto opens the disc with three Nocturnes composed by himself: 
            apparently, he is an interesting and skilled composer. The three pieces 
            are multi-layered and ballad-like. They evoke a series of images - 
            maybe stories, maybe memories. There are stimulating harmonic progressions 
            and memorable motifs, but above all, there is music, which 
            goes beyond the simple building blocks of melody, rhythm or harmony. 
            
              
            This is also true of other works on the album. Most pieces are painted 
            in a cold and dark palette. After Torresan’s bittersweet Notturno 
            come two pieces by Manca, each sad and a little depressive. Di Salvo’s 
            Penelope beautifully conveys the feeling of long sleepless 
            waiting. Ninna nanna a Donegal is a luminous lullaby, full 
            of love. The melody and the accompaniment are simple and endearing. 
            La colline di Karen is a slow, atmospheric, Debussian half-waltz. 
            
              
            Albini’s Corale is all about harmony. With its nervously 
            throbbing pulse, it could be one of Bach’s WTC preludes. From 
            Pujol we have a sad, fado-like song, static and reflective. Lasala’s 
            Nocturno brings us to the same night garden where Debussy has 
            walked in the moonlight. All is quiet - all is good. The music swings 
            slowly, like a leisurely pendulum. 
              
            Rózsa’s Valse crepusculaire is a dreamy, wistful 
            waltz, with an instantly memorable melody. It creates thoughts about 
            sitting near a campfire in the night woods with the smoke rising to 
            the tree tops. The sparks fly and fade, and there’s a vast brooding 
            presence. Finally we arrive at York’s Into dark. We are 
            sleepy and so is the music. The fire is dying in the fireplace, the 
            cinders glow, the darkness quietly and comfortably comes closer. We’ll 
            go to bed now, and all will be good. The music calmly fades away. 
            
              
            The performance is inspired. Mirto applies light rubato very 
            naturally, and his dynamic gradations are well calculated. His touch 
            is soft yet strong, and his manner of sound-producing is truly singing. 
            The guitar’s voice is sonorous, without the wooden dryness. 
            There are no micro-delays in front of difficult chords. My only complaint 
            is about the occasional extra-musical sounds produced when the guitarist 
            moves his fingers along the strings - these little shrieks and squeaks 
            and hisses are annoying. They are not too distracting, yet noticeable. 
            The sound is very full, sometimes organ-like. The acoustic fullness 
            and closeness creates the impression of almost touching the strings. 
            
              
            This is a lovely disc. Trying to put it into “background” 
            mode regularly failed: I dropped the stuff I was doing and sat to 
            listen. When it was over, the “Repeat” button was always 
            there to help.  
            
            Oleg Ledeniov  
            
            Track listing
            Giorgio MIRTO (b.1972) 
            Three Nocturnes [15:27] 
            Livio TORRESAN (b.1956) 
            Notturno [5:02] 
            Roberto MANCA (b.1963) 
            Notturno No.3 [4:14] 
            Ulisse [2:46] 
            Rosolino DI SALVO (b.1970) 
            La notte di Penelope [5:33] 
            Giorgio SIGNORILE (b.1962) 
            Ninna nanna a Donegal [4:41] 
            La colline di Karen, notturno africano [4:16] 
            Giovanni ALBINI (b.1982) 
            Corale No.45, notturno [5:37] 
            Máximo Diego PUJOL (b.1957) 
            Nocturno [4:09] 
            Angel E. LASALA (1914-2000) 
            Nocturno [3:48] 
            Miklós RÓZSA (1907-1995) 
            Valse crepusculaire [4:25] 
            Andrew YORK (b.1958) 
            Into dark [2:38]