Enchanting, Mystical, Energizing, Passionate, Earthy Sounds
Judith A. Cartisano | New York, NY USA | 11/09/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"After years of hearing nothing but stereotypical "Italian" popular music, it was a true revelation to hear the real thing. This music changed my perception of the land of my ancestors--Calabria, Italy. Allesandra Belloni is an enchanting, mystical, energizing, passionate and earthy performer. She has to be thanked for preserving a music form of intense complexity and making it accessible to the general public. The one thing that disappoints me is that Ms. Belloni has only this single CD available. I know I want to hear more."
Back to the roots
kaioatey | Awatovi, AZ | 12/30/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Alessandra Belloni is a singer, dancer and actress with impecabble credentials: she studied Commedia dell'Arte with Dario Fo, worked with Anna Magnani and Federico Fellini and, as one of the greates female percussionists in the world, she has performed with Glen Velez, Olatunji, Mickey Hart and Gilberto Gil. Her main interest is in ancient peasant music from Southern Italy, with its syncretic mix of Catholic and pagan influences. Here she demonstrates the Calabrian tarantella, a quick dance the origins of which stretch back to the Dionysian rites of ancient Greece. In the Middle Ages, the tarantella was allegedly used to help tarantulla-bitten peasant women in Southern Italy sweat the poison off their bodies. In reality, however, the quick tempo of the tarantella which unleashes the power and ecstasy that resides in the woman's body was used to excite erotic passions in men. In this CD I can see why.
Belloni is a true visionary whose exquisite beauty and power breathe out of every piece on this CD. From medieval prayer chants to peasant celebrations and love ballads, the music evokes the ecstasy that occurs when the body becomes a vessel for ancient forces that rise out of the land and its cycles; it shines with the tremendous power of the feminine reaching all the way back into ancient shamanic roots of Europe and ancient Greece. It is a rare occasion indeed that these rhythms became available. Highly recommended."