.
Ataraxia in paris
spleen
We are inspired by poetry, mainly the one
that transforms the most turbid and tormented reality, the
one of the wretches, the freaks, the buskers and the buffoons
in a sort of lyrical revelation. Two years ago we started
exploring an historical period and environment that have
always appealed to us : the 'cabarets macabres' and fun
fairs of the beginning of the XXth century in Paris. We
felt the urge to turn into music the universe of Atget,
an anomalous artist who, unlike his contemporaries, felt
the wish, through his photographic objective, to capture
the state of grace of some places, persons and situations
that till that moment had always been considered of scarce
interest. And who, better than Baudelaire, has managed to
portray that peculiar universe within his verses ? "The
spleen of Paris" has been our guide and some of its
lines have become the lyrics of our songs.
Carrying out an accurate research about the 'ghost cabarets'
that animated the nights of Boulevard de Clichy, we disappeared
into a nocturnal environment both gloomy and sparkling of
innatural colours, a distorted dimension where each mask,
drama, jest and tear turned into a grotesque and amplified
representation of life. Men, dogs, exotic perfumes, acrobats
in decay, green-eyed enchantresses, cloud sellers, heavenly
places come into existence behind the threadbare fabric
of a torn curtain rather than on the unnailed planks of
a worm-eaten stage. Identifying ourselves with the artists
of that time, we have written a collection of songs that
could have been played at the beginning of the XXth century
in the Cabaret of Heaven rather than in the Tavern of Crooks.
Thanks to the sound of bandonéons, musettes, trombones,
violins, big-drums and cymbals and the dramatic and guttural
voice of our singer, we have sung Baudelaire who, in his
turn, had sung Paris of the imaginative and under-privileged
artists of Montmartre. Anyway, this is not the first time
we set to music the verses of some decadent French poet
like Mallarmé, Apollinaire or Baudelaire himself
helped by Nicolas R. who, since several years, help us setting
our performances. This music show features four musicians
and a performer who bring back to life the grotesque, bitter
and irriverent words of "Le Spleen de Paris".
"Vous n'avez pas de verres de couleur,
de verres roses, rouges et bleus, de vitres magiques de
paradis? Impudent que vous êtes!" C.B.
.
Francesca Nicoli
|
vocals
|
Vittorio
Vandelli
|
guitar and
bass-guitar
|
Giovanni
Pagliari
|
keyboards (accordeon,
piano,
strings, barrel organ)
|
Riccardo
Spaggiari
|
percussions
(big-drum and cymbal,
cayon, tamburello, bells)
|
Livio
Bedeschi
|
performer
|
.
