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Luiz Moretto

Luiz Moretto is a violinist, double bass, fiddle player and composer living in London. His compositions incorporate ethnic elements of rhythm and timbre into the open/closed structures of jazz and Brazilian music reflecting the spontaneity of free experimentation. Luiz has been inspired by the music traditions of bowed string instruments from Africa and Brazil, which are part of his current research.

He was born in Bauru (Tupy-Guarany indigenous name to fruit-flower basket), Brazil. First studying music at home with his older sister Dolores, a piano teacher, Luiz received a bachelor degree in classical music from UDESC (State University of Santa Catarina - Brasil) in the year of 1998. In addition, Luiz studied jazz improvisation at UFMG (Federal University of Minas Gerais) in Belo Horizonte also attending a course in improvised music by Carlos Zingaro in Lisbon where he lived for ten years. Since 2012 he has been pursuing his PhD in ethnomusicology at King’s College London with David Treece and Frederick Moehn as joint supervisors.

His latest album "Vampyroteuthis Infernalis" - Luiz Moretto Quintet was recorded in Rome in 2014. The CD was released in January 2015 by the UK’s label SLAM, blending Afro-Brazilian musical expressions to the Italian free jazz aesthetics. The album has been critically acclaimed by Jazz Journal, Cadence Magazine, Jazz Views, Jazz Weekly (top ten albums lists of 2015), Jazz Colours, Jazz.pt, Le Son Du Grisli, Bird is the Worm, Music Zoon, Free Form Free jazz, Breakaplate and Downtown Music Gallery.

Always keeping improvisation as the main focus of interest in the intermediations between jazz, free jazz, african, brazilian and improvised music, Luiz has collaborated, performed and recorded in Europe with creative artists in music, dance and film including London Improvisers Orchestra, Alípio C Neto, Francesco Lo Cascio, Marco Ariano, Gianfranco Tedeschi, Greg Burk, Ruda Santos, Victor Gama, Antonio Tavares, VGO Variable Geometry Orchestra, Ernesto Rodrigues, Orlando Legname, Embaúba Ensemble, King's Brazil Ensemble, Refilon, José de Castro, Genitho Rasta, Ngoma Mozambique, Marcelo Fortuna, Johannes Krieger, Mick Trovoada, among others.

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Review by Jason Bivins - CADENCE MAGAZINE Oct Nov Dec 2015 - USA

http://www.cadencejazzmagazine.com/membersonly/admin/asse ts/CadenceOctoberIssue2015.pdf

(1) is a vivid, and wondrously engaging date, like an old Dolphy session with Hutch recorded on some far flung planet. The tart, keening sound of Moretto’s rabeca and violin interact really well with Neto’s horns, all suspended in a supple web of vibes, bass, and percussion. The band trades in a music that balances texture with rhythmic intensity, and it’s hard to deny how compelling that combination can be. Many of the pieces build from simple ideas, from the billowing texture of the opener to folkish lines of “Rope em Fuga,” to raw propulsion. It’s all shaped by three distinct band elements that blend marvelously: the intense expression of the two frontline players, the generous rhythm team (who really shape the music via the space they leave between the notes), and Lo Cascio’s vibes the coloristic middle. It’s cohesive, and as a group they play with control and dynamic variation. On tunes like “Rio” and “Rope em Fuga,” there’s a near romanticism that blooms with the largely free-ish music (think Motian in terms of the balance of abstraction, if not the actual musical language). But there’s also a propensity for quick dancing heads and bright melodies, at times recalling some of India Cooke’s groups. The soloists play bracingly, but it’s the moments of interplay that get me the most: the Dolphy-to-Rahsaan lope of the title track, the propulsive “Refracoes” and its hot counterlines, the earthy funk of the closer, with hard vibes playing of the grainy sound of the rabeca (the fiddle from northeastern Brazil). My one gripe is that the leader sometimes comes across as too understated on his own session, but that’s also something to admire. Do check this one out

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