2014.09.26 FRI.
ITALIAN SURF ACADEMY
Plays Spaghetti Western
<Macaroni Western played by ITALIAN SURF ACADEMY>
An Italian who is a friend of Mark Ribow and is active in NY.
Avant-garde guitarist Marco Cappeli, will visit Japan for the second time.
This time, the song used by Enrico Morikone and other Macaroni Western was played.
To perform live performances in Tokyo and Osaka. It is also popular in Japan
It's one of the few concerts where you can listen to songs by Morikone and other Italian writers!
Hiroshi Asada
Avant-garde guitarist Marco Cappeli, will visit Japan for the second time.
This time, the song used by Enrico Morikone and other Macaroni Western was played.
To perform live performances in Tokyo and Osaka. It is also popular in Japan
It's one of the few concerts where you can listen to songs by Morikone and other Italian writers!
Hiroshi Asada
Advance sale ¥4,000
¥4,500 on the day
With reference number, all freedom, preschoolers (under 6 years old) not allowed
Umeda Club Quattro
<Marco Cappeli>
Marco Cappeli, who works in a band called the Italian Surf Academy, was born in Naples, Italy in 1965 and currently lives in New York. After performing in puberty groups such as rock, blues, and Naples, he studied classical guitar and chamber music at Cum Laude from the Conservatorio di Santa Cecilia in Rome and Musik-Akademie in Basel. A guitarist who is active in a variety of fields, from strictly written contemporary classical works to free improvisation, while frequently using an original modified guitar called "extruct guitar", which adds eight strings to the usual six strings. Cappeli longed for Western American drama and liked American surfing music that was popular around the same time, so he named his band the Italian Surf Academy and often used surf music in his album.
He has performed with many musicians around the world, including Anthony Coleman, Hideki Kato, Michelle Godhar, Butch Morris, Jim Priage, Enrico Lava, Elliott Sharp, Han Benink, and Yoshihide Otomo. Recently, he has also participated in Mark Libor's band "Caged Funk".
<Macaroni Western>
Japanese English representing Western Italian drama made in the 1960s and early 1970s.
In U.K., the United States of America, Italy, and other countries, these western plays are called Spaghetti Western, but when Sergio Leone's "Board of the Wilderness" was imported into Japan, the film critic Nagaharu Yodogawa said, "It seems that the contents of spaghetti are thin and poor." Because it is a word coined by Japanese, the word Macaroni Western is not valid in other countries. However, as an exception, both names are used in Korea, and the more commonly used is "Macaroni Western." Since the name "Spaghetti Western" is somewhat despised, the name "Italo Western" is official in Germany. Those that involve many other than Italians, such as actors, are sometimes referred to as "Euro Western."
Made by an Italian director, Macaroni Western was also featured in music by Italian composers, featuring an electric guitar sound. The song by Enrico Moriconone and other Italian composers is said to be the true concept of longing for the United States, which was once felt by Europeans.