CINE PRIVE - DOMENICO
CINE PRIVE - DOMENICO
Tracklist :
1. Cine Privê 3:40
2. Os Pinguinhos 2:51
3. 5 Sentidos 3:14
4. Receita 3:42
5. Ondas Do Mar 3:30
6. Fortaleza 2:25
7. Sulla Cita Su Di Te 3:32
8. Sue Beliza 1:56
9. Zona Portuuaria 4:39
10. Hugo Carvana 2:16
11. Peteleco Zum 4:50
12. Uma Porção de Coisas 1:59
13. Família Oca 2:19
14. Receita 4:45 (Miguel Atwood-Ferguson Remix) (Bonus track)
The words “cine privê” conjure up late-night skin flicks for Brazilians, but the more appropriate meaning of the album title is closer to its literal translation: private cinema. “I like to listen to music made for films,” Domenico says. “I like music that was conceived to support a certain image or scene. In these cases, the music interacts directly with the nervous system.” Despite growing up with a professional sambista as a father, Domenico’s first love was drawing. “There was a time I wanted to be a visual artist, a painter, but in music there was the meeting, the partnership, the friends, it’s a more seductive ambience,” Domenico says.
He laments that he can’t find time to do both, “but I realize more and more that my music is influenced by images and by visual arts in general,” Domenico says. “When I’m going to record an album, I look for a “photo” that’s in line with the image [in my mind] I have for the album.”
“I really love being in the studio and it’s important to have people that understand you, because all the musicians are artistic collaborators,” Domenico says. “I really value that I have freedom when I’m recording, this way the music can go in unusual directions. We made a lot of things in this way experimenting [in the studio].”
Cine Privê finds Domenico more introspective and delicate than on his previous album with the +2s (the collaborative and experimental rock group with Moreno Veloso & Kassin). Built on consistently intriguing rhythms and sonic textures, Cine Privê is reminiscent of the meditative yet swinging quality of Joao Donato’s mid-seventies albums (Quem É Quem & Lugar Comum) as filtered through the indie aesthetic of Yo La Tengo, Pavement or Stereolab, sans the in-your-face avant-garde-isms.
True to his intentions, many of Domenico’ songs come across like soundtracks to lost films, for instance: the falling-in-love montage in an Italian rom-com starring Roberto Benigni (“Su Di Te”) or the Spaghetti Western set in the Brazilian Northeast (“Família Oca”). One of the three bonus tracks written for a children’s special soundtrack, “Peteleco Zum”, is a space age, grooving, Latin lullaby mature beyond its audience.
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