Eden Roc Ludovico Einaudi
Album info
Album-Release:
1999
HRA-Release:
22.03.2024
Label: Decca (UMO) (Classics)
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Classical Crossover
Artist: Ludovico Einaudi
Composer: Ludovico Einaudi (1955)
Album including Album cover
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- Ludovico Einaudi (b. 1955):
- 1 Einaudi: Yerevan 02:24
- 2 Einaudi: Eden Roc 03:21
- 3 Einaudi: Fuori Dalla Notte 04:56
- 4 Einaudi: Due Tramonti 04:52
- 5 Einaudi: Nefeli 04:11
- 6 Einaudi: Odessa 05:47
- 7 Einaudi: Ultimi Fuochi 04:04
- 8 Einaudi: Giorni Dispari 05:13
- 9 Einaudi: Julia 04:48
- 10 Einaudi: Fuori Dal Mondo 04:57
- 11 Einaudi: Ultimi Fuochi II 01:29
- 12 Einaudi: Un Mondo A Parte 04:06
- 13 Einaudi: Password 04:30
- 14 Einaudi: Yerevan II 01:43
- 15 Einaudi: Exit 08:00
Info for Eden Roc
Ludovico Einaudi studied piano & composition at the Conservatory in Milan & also with composer Luciano Berio. His early career produced several chamber & orchestral compositions, but he expanded his works in the mid-1980s by creating a series of successful dance & multimedia works. His move to film music in the mid-1990's seemed a logical progression where his innovative & imaginative composing style has had significant impact on his peers, who have bestowed him with 4 major international awards as of this writing. His 21st Century pieces fuse a myriad of styles, including ambient, minimalist and avant-garde, drawn from his admiration of rock groups like Radiohead and Red Hot Chili Peppers, attracting fans from across the popular musical spectrum. Einaudi performed this rich, melodic set of chamber pieces himself, accompanied by Djivan Gasparian and Quartetto David.
"From the moody atmospherics of the opener‚ Yerevan and the alt. country feel of the title track‚ it is clear that ‘Eden Roc’‚ Ludovico Einaudi’s new collection‚ is more wide ranging in its contrasts of mood than his previous discs for BMG. The question has been previously raised of whether this onetime pupil of Berio has followed his musical or commercial instincts‚ but the best approach to this new disc is simply to enjoy it as a sophisticated sequence of musical evocations. These range from the plaintive Für Eliseisms of the solo piano Nefeli (track 5)‚ and the unsurprisingly Beatleesque Julia (track 9)‚ to engaging ensemble pieces such as Odessa (track 6)‚ the distinctive smoky tone of the duduk (a kind of shepherd’s flute) making its presence felt. Einaudi’s attempts to inject a degree of rhythmic motion‚ as in the postminimalist figuration of Ultimi fuochi (track 7)‚ sound strained at best. Much better is the soulfulness of Un mondo a parte (track 12)‚ or the lightlyapplied melancholy of Exit (leave the disc playing for a brief piano sign off) – qualities which Einaudi’s miniatures capture in some measure. The performances amply convey the sense of musicians playing together in a spirit of friendship‚ though whether a limited degree of improvised musicmaking found its way into the Milan sessions during July 1999 is uncertain. Recorded with suitable intimacy‚ this is a release that provides a soundtrack to an imaginary film – listeners being left to supply their own visuals." (Gramophone)
Ludovico Einaudi, piano
David String Quartet
Djivan Gasparians, duduk
Digitally remastered
Please Note: We offer this album in its native sampling rate of 48 kHz, 24-bit. The provided 96 kHz version was up-sampled and offers no audible value!
Ludovico Einaudi
Luminous, emotive, effortlessly lyrical and always supremely refined the music and performance of Ludovico Einaudi have attracted an ever growing audience over the last two decades whose diversity and devotion are without parallel. He has released a series of chart-topping albums with sales of over a million copies, sells out the most prestigious concert halls worldwide, composed a string of award-winning film scores and routinely tops audience polls becoming an internet phenomenon. With a unique musical alchemy that draws on elements of classical, rock, electronica and world musics he has rendered traditional ideas of genre and audience divide obsolete and become not only one of the best known composers in the world today but almost certainly the best loved too.
Ludovico was born in Turin, Italy and trained as a classical composer and pianist at the Milan Conservatorio before continuing his studies with Luciano Berio, one of the most important composers of the twentieth century avant-garde. His career began with a series of prestigious commissions for institutions such as the USA’s Tanglewood Festival and Paris’ IRCAM but he turned away from what seemed a glittering classical career to forge his own musical path, giving him the freedom to reconcile his wider-ranging influences.
It was a bold strategy but one quickly rewarded, when Ludovico’s electric harp suite ‘Stanze’ (1997) was first played on BBC Radio the switchboard jammed with listeners. It was a similar story with his next release ‘Le Onde’ (1998), a solo piano cycle he performed himself. A listener-organised campaign made it Ludovico’s breakthrough and a permanent fixture atop the Classic FM charts. This upswell of grass roots activity, snowballing with the onset of the internet and social media, has allowed Ludovico to build a uniquely close relationship directly with his audience.
‘Le Onde’ also ignited Ludovico’s career in Film & TV music and he has since composed many award-winning scores including ‘Doctor Zhivago’ (2002) and ‘Sotto Falso Nome’ (2004) which also became successful albums in their own right. In recent years Shane Meadows’ acclaimed film ‘This Is England’ (2006) and its television sequel ‘This Is England ‘86’ (2010) have brought a BAFTA nomination for Ludovico and introduced his music to a huge new audience, Countless television programmes feature his music and the ad world has incorporated it in campaigns for brands including American Airlines, Vodafone, Sony Blu-ray and John Lewis.
Ludovico built on the impact of ‘Le Onde’ with a series of albums notable for their exuberant experimentation. ‘Eden Roc’ (1999) saw an array of guest musicians and instruments ranging from electric guitar to the Armenian duduk. ‘I Giorni’ (2001) deepened this engagement with world music in Ludovico’s second collection for solo piano. His ‘best of’ collection from these first four albums ‘Echoes: The Einaudi Collection’ (2003) has since sold more than 100,000 copies.
As Ludovico’s fame grew, his concert schedule naturally grew along with it and became an increasingly important part of his life. It immediately led to two new albums, Diario Mali (2005), a collaboration with kora virtuoso Ballaké Sissoko and his first live solo album ‘La Scala Concert 03.03.03’ (2003), recorded in his adopted city of Milan.
The release of ‘Una Mattina’ (2004) saw more ‘firsts’, it was Ludovico’s debut album on new and current record label Universal and also his most ‘classical’ to date. Largely written for solo piano, it leapt to the top of the UK Classical album chart and gave him his first sold-out UK tour.
Now one of the most popular composers in the UK and throughout Europe, at home Ludovico’s reputation scaled even loftier heights and thus on May 26th, 2005 in Rome, Ludovico Einaudi was awarded the ‘Ordine al Merito della Repubblica Italiana’ (or ‘OMRI’) the senior order of Knighthood bestowed by the Italian Republic.
The stage was set for ‘Divenire’ (2007) his most musically ambitious album yet and his greatest commercial success to date. ‘Divenire’ gathered many of the musical ‘streams’ that had flowed through Ludovico’s career and expanded on them with the help of The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra and a battery of digital effects.
On release it became a phenomenon, topping classical charts throughout Europe and crashing the Italian pop charts. With sales in excess of 300,000 copies and a BRIT awards ‘Album of the Year’ nomination, Ludovico embarked on his biggest tour yet, 80 dates across Europe. One was captured for his second live album ‘Live In Berlin’ (2008) and it all culminated at a memorable concert at London’s Royal Albert Hall.
With people around the globe now clamoring to see him Ludovico became a permanent fixture on the road, traveling to new audiences in India, Japan and the USA. Along the way he formed a collaboration with Robert Lippock of post-rock band ‘To Rococo Rot’ and the results would be heard in two albums released in 2009, one featuring Ludovico as ‘band member’, the other as a solo artist.
First was ‘Cloudland’ (2009) the debut from ‘Whitetree’ - comprising Ludovico on piano, Robert Lippok on electronics, and Robert’s brother Ronald Lippok on drums - which has a sunny African feel amid the cutting-edge electronics and percussion.
‘Nightbook’ (2009) Ludovico’s seventh solo album was a perfect contrast. Meditative and introspective it charts an inward voyage through dreams and the shadows of the psyche with evocative use of electronics. Ludovico calls it his ‘Dark Side of The Moon’ and though challenging, it too found immediate resonance with his audience who once again took Ludovico to the summit of the charts and back into the concert halls.
The ‘Nightbook’ tour produced ‘The Royal Albert Hall Concert’ (2010) a double CD and DVD documenting Ludovico’s concert at the venue in March 2010. Drawing on every part of a now distinguished career, it shows a composer and performer at the very height of his creative powers.
This album contains no booklet.