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INkBlot

by Daniele Gottardo

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1.
Spirals 06:38
2.
Blue Salt 04:53
3.
INkBlot 04:08
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The Cabinet 04:00
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about

Renowned Italian composer and guitar virtuoso Daniele Gottardo’s brilliant new concept album, INkBlot, is an inventive and daring series of modern guitar chamber music that dives deep into the realms of visual art, psychology, harmony, and counterpoint. From the album’s opening flurry of impressionistic strings and subtle, textural guitar arpeggios, one is immediately drawn in like Alice chasing the White Rabbit—lured by the wafting mist of harmonic colors, driven by the music’s visceral sense of wonder and curiosity. And the world awaiting—the one so carefully spun from waking dreams into existence by Gottardo—is every bit as rich, colorful and sublime as Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland.
 
INkBlot is a record that contains multitudes. It is alternately sonorous and dissonant, blissful and frightening, focused and whimsical, peaceful and unsettling, at times excited to the point of restless anxiety before collapsing into hushed contentment. It is intellectual but never sacrifices its emotional gravity on the altar of the academic, and it is achingly, awe-inspiringly beautiful. The album exists at a rare vertex in space-time where Debussy’s “Claire de Lune” straps in alongside Stravinsky’s Firebird on an interstellar spacecraft bound for star systems unknown. Through it all, Gottardo is at the helm, his electric six-string his avatar as he interacts with the fantastical alternate universe he’s created, his guitar melodies weaving in and out in dialogue with the ensemble, strands of thread on the cosmic loom.
 
“Definitely the guitar on the album represents me, the person,” Gottardo says. “While 90 percent of my work was spent on the overall arrangement, and maybe 10 percent on writing and performing guitar, at the end of the day I want to place myself in an environment I’ve created—a world to explore, one where I can be comfortable and feel at home. I know every last detail of it because I wrote every note—I know exactly where I can go, so I can enjoy myself playing within the musical landscape.”
 
In the lead up to writing and recording INkBlot, Gottardo devoted himself to the study of orchestration, arrangement, counterpoint, and harmony. In his approach, he emulated the old masters, learning from the same rare music theory texts—many of them centuries old and now out-of-print—that they’d consulted in their time. In these books, Gottardo says, he discovered a foundational musical language that took his composing to a new level. With his freshly sharpened skills, he began working on a new concept—a kind of crossover music incorporating various classical forms with production elements of modern popular music and an arrangement style closer to traditional European orchestration.
 
“A lot of rock musicians have used an orchestra in the background—Metallica, even KISS did that,” Gottardo says. “It’s very common. With INkBlot, however, I was trying to use the timbre of the guitar in a way where it was part of the ensemble and not just an instrument in front of it. The guitar plays lead on the album, but there are very few solos. So often with instrumental music, the guitar takes the role of the vocalist, but I was more interested in using it as part of a conversation between instruments. This is counterpoint—the art of combining and contrasting two or more different melodies.”
 
Despite the guitar being Daniele’s primary instrument, most of the writing for INkBlot was done at the piano, with Gottardo searching and experimenting until a mood or direction would emerge. From there, he’d begin composing, typically on Logic Pro, the workflow similar to electronic music, using digital instruments and plug-ins to flesh out ideas. The scores were also prepared on the computer. Once they were ready, Gottardo hit the studio in Italy, recording live musicians playing vintage instruments in small ensembles. “Usually, the foundation is a string quartet,” he says. “In the studio, we used four different rooms, each member of the quartet isolated in their own room. That facilitates editing for a polished result, like a pop album. I wanted it to be a modern production.”

credits

released October 31, 2022

Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Ugo Bolzoni at NevenRecords

Musicians:
Glauco Bertagnin: First Violin
Matteo Marzaro: Second Violin
Alessandro Pandolfi: Viola
Giordano Pegoraro: Cello
Claudio Vignali: Piano
Andrea Dainese: Flute, Piccolo
Giovanni Forestan: Clarinet, Bass Clarinet
Nicola Medici: Oboe, English Horn
Matteo Scavazza: Basson, Contrabasson
Giuseppe Risitano: Percussion
Kirsten Menn: Soprano
Daniele Gottardo: Electric Guitar, programming

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Daniele Gottardo San Francisco, California

Daniele Gottardo is an Italian guitar player and composer. He composes and performs original music for guitar and chamber orchestra as well as records and performs a variety of styles, from modern jazz-rock to pop.

Daniele has developed a reputation worldwide, not just only for his virtuosic technical abilities and versatility, but for the depth and sophistication of his compositions.
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