Tuesday 10 September 2013

Quella vecchia locanda, the first lp 1972



Today we are going to talk about “Quella Vecchia Locanda”, an Italian rock band formed in the Monteverde district of Rome, at the beginning of the 70s. At the initial stage, the members  of the group  were Giorgio Giorgi - voice and flute, Raimondo Cocco - guitar and  clarion, Romualdo Coletta - bass, Patrick Traina - drums, Donald Lax  - violin, Massimo Roselli  - keyboards and, for a short while,  Carlo Mariani  on  piano.




The creative name of the band (That Old Inn) seems to have originated  from where they initially met for rehearsals: a real decrepit inn which had been  abandoned many years before.  At the beginning, the band  dedicated itself to live performances in the Roman pop environment creating for itself a solid reputation.  The real consecration of the band came in 1972 with its performances at the Pop Concert Festival held at Villa Pamphili Park, after which it was engaged by the Help! Label.


The Villa Phampili Park Frstival (1972)


The Help! Label was an Italian record company established at the end of the 60s by record producer Gianni Dell’Orso who began to produce during his experience at Parade Records.  Help! was distributed by the Italian RCA and mainly released pop and progressive rock.  Besides Quella Vecchia Locanda, he had under contract the Procession band (from Turin)  and singer-songwriter   Folkaldo  also known as Franco Maria Giannini. Gianni Dell’Orso’s list of bands included the Germans  The Rattles  and The Sub and Austrian Musician  Eddy Korsche (known as Free Action Inc) who turned out to be one his of  closest  associate.




In 1972, the debut album of Quelli della Vecchia Locanda is released.  The record is structured as a concept album, with a constant melodic music thread crossed by frequent symphonic passages that underline magical and fable traces connected to the lyrics, but the most of classical hard progressive   sound is never missed on this album.
There is evidence of Vivaldi’s influence, particularly in the phrasing stage between voice and piano. It is the flute here that takes the stage, as a reminder of Jethro Tull. Also the electric violin played by virtuoso Donald Lax contributes to the building up of a sound that avoids clashes with violins and pianos  which could remind us of the acid sounds of Comus (as in First Utterance) and have a more solar and Italian range of sounds.





 “Prologo” opens up the concept album, where a classic violin excells over keyboards, guitars and flute. The track develops in different tempos  that leave space to a breezy quietness which is crashed by a flute solo Ian Anderson style.  We again find classic violin accompanied by flute in “Un Villagio, Un’Ilusione”  which turned out to be a classical example of progressive music played in Italy in those years.




Cocco’s  arpeggios of classic guitar accompanied by birds’ singing opens the dreamy “Reality”, takes  the listener in a dream state. Here the sound plots get more convincing and we can find a similarity with Premiata Forneria Marconi and  Banco del Mutuo Soccorso bands.  In  “immagini Sfuocate” , the atmosphere we can perceive is more rock-oriented, rythm  gets higher and the guitar of Raimondo Cocco  really dominates this performance. After this we find what I reckon to be  the best song in the album: “Il Cieco”.  Inside it, we find a flute solo that recalls My God which perfectly integrates within the track. We can consider it hard rock but it lacks the frequent tempo changes present on previous track.
The fusion between  the guys in “Dialogo” reaches perfection.  Keyboards  are highlighted and accompany us all the way to the pleasant solo of Giorgi’s ottavino flute. At the end we get “Verso La Locanda”  and “Sogno, Risveglio e....” winding up this outstanding work  and that confirm the excellent bond  between classic and progressive rock.




Well,  “Quella Vecchia Locanda” is certainly an awesome start for the band.  The genial solutions adopted are never repetitive, pleasant and interesting to hear  and very difficult to trace in other bands,  turning this album into one of the first classics of the first Progressive Italian Rock. A last note of merit goes to the art-work of cover which contributes  to the definition  of the dreamy story thread  of the record.




Encouraged by the warm welcome  received  by the album, the band intensified its concerts, also through the  participation to the “Festival di Musica d’Avanguardia e Nuove Tendenze”. Subsequently there was a change in the band  with the exit of virtuoso Donald Lux and the bass-guitarist Coletta, who were replaced respectively by Claudio Filice and Massimo Giorgi. In 1974  the band conceived a second and last lp, “Il tempo della gioia.....”  but this is another story of which we will talk about soonest.




Original Lp Tracks list

Prologo - 5:01
Un villaggio, un'illusione - 3:53
Realtà - 4:14
Immagini sfuocate - 2:57
Il cieco - 4:14
Dialogo - 3:43
Verso la locanda - 5:17
Sogno, risveglio e... - 5:13







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