Timoteo "Dino" Saluzzi (ARG), b. May 21,
1935, was part of Erling Kroners "Dream Quintet" with Quique
Sinesi (g) and featuring Dino Saluzzi (band) at the JAZZPAR 1998 Project.
Trained by his father, who, besides working at a sugar
cane factory barely able to support the family, also was a folk-musician,
Dino Saluzzi started playing the bandoneon at the age of seven. (The diatonic
variety of the accordion was developed by the German: Heinrich Band.)
While studying in Buenos Aires he began to play professionally and became
member of the symphonic Orquesta Estable at Radio El Mundo. He met Astor
Piazolla as the term "tango nuevo" began to be aired. He became
member of Enrique Francini's tango-orchestra in 1955 hence forming his
own group El Pen Tango.
A new septet was formed in 1970 working with folklore
as well as tango. Saluzzi was featured on Gato Barbieri's record "Chapter
One: Latin America" in 73 and gained recognition outside tango circles
due to his virtuous and deeply felt bandoneon-playing and improvisation.
He worked as arranger and soloist for Enrique Mario Francini's Sinfonica
de Tango which brought him to Japan in 77. In Europe his Cuarteto Dino
Saluzzi made headlines in 79 where he also co-founded the experimental
chamber ensemble Música Creativa. From the 80s onwards Saluzzi
collaborated with numerous European and American jazz musicians. He toured
and recorded with George Gruntz Concert Band and recorded solo "Kultrum",
also singing and playing percussion, in 1982-83. Since he has toured Europe
and recorded and performed with Enrico Rava, Louis Sclavis, Charlie Mariano,
Al DiMeola, Anthony Cox and many others, inevitably able to maintain his
strong identity in each context - albeit most profoundly when he performs
on his own conditions.
In Saluzzi's hands, the bandoneon sometimes has the
harmonic qualities of a cathedral pipe organ, at other times it sings
lyrical melodic lines, paints abstract soundscapes and tells evocative
stories. Saluzzi's CD "Cite De La Musique" should be required
listening for lite jazz cats aspiring to break through superficialities
and play truly enrapturing music, Dan Ouellette ends his review in
Down Beat.
The Argentinean bandoneon master Dino Saluzzi has freed
the tango from its fixed structure, employing virtuous runs, uneven metres,
blue notes and jazz phrasing. He is a purist of sound. Tango for Saluzzi
is concentrated emotion: yearning, rebellion and rapture. He attempts
to express the widest range of feelings. He is concerned that his music
should not fall into an eclecticism that has feebled several variants
of Latin American music. He seeks a flexible, vital and real form beyond
conventions. Saluzzi's approach is a compositional one, influenced by
his classical studies but strongly biased by his folk roots, be it tango,
candombe, candina, or milonga. Saluzzi has always maintained that his
folk roots are the most crucial element of his music.
The discography of Saluzzi is extensive with numerous
recordings in Argentina and on the ECM-label - one of them, "Once
Upon A Time - Far Away In The South" (ECM, 1985), with Palle Mikkelborg,
Charlie Haden and Pierre Favre. The ECM-recording, "Mojotoro",
is the first of his European releases recorded in Argentina with a band
comprising family and friends.
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