Though Andrea Sartori is a newcomer to the international scene, he's been active in his Italian hometown Bologna for years organizing events and performing live. Sartori's original sound is an alchemy of funk, dub, jazz and minimal techno, in his own words 'a recreational sound, which reminds one of the frivolity of 70s funk and fusion, the disengagement of video game and cartoon soundtracks and the Italian genre of Musica Leggera (easy listening).'
Sartori made his full-length album debut in 2007 with Il Tagliacode on Stewart Walker's Persona Records. The music was assembled from a large pool of live performances recorded Italy, with sonic textures coming from female voices, kalimba, live drums, guitar, electric piano, harp and incidental sounds. Sartori collaged and composed each track to develop the source material from each soloist into a comprehensive whole, processing the sounds, allowing the click/stutter/buzz constants of modern electronic music through, as well as employing reverb, tape delays, and distortion pedals to create a vintage acoustic space.
With the intention of using live samples to be woven in later, Sartori used mostly soft synths and virtual drum machines to craft the early arrangements and textures for Il Tagliacode. For the recordings, Sartori was invited to the studio of Giampiero Stramaccia, an Italian musician resident in Foligno (a calm city in Umbria, Italy and a retreat for many upcoming Italian jazz artists) during the summer of 2006. With a hard disk and some mics, Sartori moved into the studio for seven days where he was visited by some of the best musicians in the Umbrian scene. He explained themes he was interested in, recorded the musicians improvising around the theme, and later integrated the recordings into his work.
www.myspace.com/andreasartori
www.personarecords.com