This hugely popular trumpet player (born in Trieste, Italy in 1939) almost single-handedly brought Italian jazz to international attention. He began playing Dixieland trombone in Turin, but after hearing
Miles Davis, switched instruments and embraced the modern style. Other key meetings were with
Gato Barbieri, with whom he recorded movie soundtracks in 1962, and
Chet Baker. He began to play with
Steve Lacy; he also teamed up with South African expatriates
Louis Moholo and
John Dyani and recorded
The Forest and the Zoo (ESP) live in Argentina. In 1967, he moved to New York, playing with
Roswell Rudd,
Marion Brown,
Rashied Ali,
Cecil Taylor, and
Charlie Haden. In a brief return to Europe,
Rava recorded with
Lee Konitz (Stereokonitz, RCA) and
Manfred Schoof (
European Echoes, FMP). From 1969 to 1976, he was back in New York, recording
Escalator Over the Hill with
Carla Bley's
Jazz Composers' Orchestra. After his first album as a leader,
Il Giro del Giorno in 80 Mondi (Black Saint), he began to lead his own pianoless quartets and quintets. His recorded output numbers 100 records, 30 as a leader.
ECM has reissued some of his essential recordings of the '70s, like
The Pilgrim and the Stars,
The Plot, and Enrico Rava Quartet, while Soul Note and Label Bleu published CDs by his innovative Electric Five (in reality a sextet, as he always excludes himself from the count), which includes two electric guitars. With keyboard master
Franco D'Andrea and trumpeter
Paolo Fresu,
Rava recorded
Bix and Pop (Philology) and
Shades of Chet, tributes to
Bix Beiderbecke and
Armstrong, and to
Chet Baker, respectively. Also of note are
Rava, L'opera Va and
Carmen, gorgeous readings of opera arias. In 2001, he created a new quintet with young talents
Gianluca Petrella,
Stefano Bollani,
Rosario Bonaccorso, and
Roberto Gatto, and toured with old friends
Roswell Rudd and
Gato Barbieri, releasing
Easy Living with them in 2004 on ECM. Three years later, after
Bollani, who had struck out as a solo player, was replaced by
Andrea Pozza,
The Words and the Days came out. In 2007,
Rava and pianist
Stefano Bollani released The Third Man on ECM.
Rava followed the released in 2009 with New York Days, a collection of moody originals with a film noir tinge, backed by a band that included
Bollani, tenor saxophonist Mark Turner, bassist Larry Grenadier, and drummer Paul Motian.
Rava broke in a new all-Italian quintet for Tribe, which was issued by ECM in the fall of 2011. Its members included trombonist
Gianluca Petrella, pianist Giovanni Guidi, bassist Gabriele Evangelista, and drummer Fabrizio Sferra. Guitarist Giacomo Ancillotto also guested on the set, expanding the lineup on various selections. Rava made a wide left turn for 2012's On the Dance Floor. Amazingly, the trumpeter only became aware of pop singer Michael Jackson's music after his death, and he became obsessed with it. The album, his tribute to what he considers the late singer's contribution to 20th century music, was recorded with Parco della Musica Jazz Lab at the Rome Auditorium; it is entirely comprised of Jackson's material.
–
Francesco Martinelli, Rovi