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OSANNA:
L'UOMO (Fonit Cetra CDM 2037) [1971]
MILANO CALIBRO 9 (Fonit Cetra CDP 420) [1972]
PALEPOLI (Fonit Cetra CDLP 425) [1973]
LANDSCAPE OF LIFE (Fonit Cetra CDLP 424) [1974]
SUDDANCE (Italian Columbia COL 466421 2) [1978]
UNO: UNO (Fonit Cetra CDLP 428) [1974]
CITTA' FRONTALE: EL TOR (Fonit Cetra CDM 2028) [1975]
NOVA: BLINK (Vinyl Magic VM 020) [1976]
The tangled story of Osanna -- a major force in Italian rock in the seventies -- begins around 1970 in Naples, with the formation of the first version of Citta' Frontale. This band, which never recorded, included keyboardist Gianni Leone (who later recorded as Leo Nero). Leone left to join Il Balleto di Bronzo, and Elio D'Anna joined and the group became Osanna.
The original Osanna -- which remained the same for the first four albums recorded under that name -- was a quintet consisting of Danilo Rustici on guitars and keyboards; Lino Vairetti on vocals, guitars and keyboards; Elio D'Anna on saxes and flute; Lello Brandi on bass; and Massimo Guarino on drums and percussion. The music they played came at "progressive rock" from a different, harder-edged direction than most Italian rock. The Mediterranean melodic sensibility is there, but it's blended with a psychedelic, Jimi Hendrix-influenced hardrock. In essense, Osanna was more of an old-fashioned rock 'n' roll band than were most Italian progressive bands of the seventies. Osanna could kick ass.
Paolo Barotto, in THE RETURN OF ITALIAN POP, states, "Their first album is another fundamental event in the history of Italian pop music and shows their fine writing and playing. The spotlight is on Elio D'Anna, who plays sax and flute, and on the electric guitar of Danilo Rustici. Their rock is aggressive even if a little bit 'naive,' and the lyrics are very interesting, half Italian half English, sung with great power and emotion." D'Anna's flute ranges from pretty to dirty in the style Ian Anderson picked up from jazzman Rahsaan Roland Kirk, and his sax playing (mostly on tenor) is wildly uninhibited -- combining r'n'b honk-and-scree with psychedelic freakouts. As Barotto puts it, "the protagonist was always Elio D'Anna, well backed up by the very disciplined Danilo Rustici and the good voice of Vairetti."
MILANO CALIBRO 9 uses an orchestra in places and is a classical/rock hybrid of the sort not uncommon in
But the group had broken up by the time the fourth album, LANDSCAPE OF LIFE, came out, and according to Barotto, "the album kept a low profile compared to previous works." Rustici and D'Anna went to
Perhaps over-hyped, Uno, despite an excellent album, met with a disappointing response. In consequence they brought in Corrado Rustici from Cervello (guitar and bass) and made Uno into a quartet. Barotto says, "Their live work got better but at the moment of their definitive 'consecration' Uno transformed itself into Nova, taking up jazz rock influences."
Nova made four LPs, all for Arista (a non-Italian label), of which only the first, BLINK, is available on CD. Danilo Rustici left after the first album (to reform Osanna -- which we'll get to soon), and Renato Rosset, the keyboards player in New Trolls Atomic System (which had also gone the jazz fusion route with its second album) joined Nova. Others, like Percy Jones, Phil Collins and Narada Michael Walden joined for an album or two -- and Ric Parnell (Ibis) joined later as drummer. Nova became almost indistinguishable from bands like Brand X, although its final album,
"In 1977," Barotto states, "after three years of contradictory rumors, Osanna recorded another album." The new lineup reunited Danilo Rustici with Lino Vairetti and Massimo Guarino, but added Enzo Petrone on bass and Fabrizio D'Angelo on keyboards. They made Suddance -- with added violin from Antonio Spagnolo and saxes from Benni Caiazzo. Barotto calls it "the worst" of Osanna's five albums, and the reason is the still-lingering presence of the spirit of jazz fusion. SUDDANCE sounds more like a Nova album than an Osanna album. It is polite where previous Osanna albums were rude, and it is restrained where they were exuberant. It was a disappointment, and the end for Osanna in the seventies.
In 1994, as bands like PFM, New Trolls, Banco and Le Orme were reforming in a wash of nostalgia and the reemergence of progressive rock in Italy, some of Osanna's members tried to reform the group, first under the name of Progetto Osanna and then as Citta' Frontale, doing some live performances. There have been no new recordings, however. Both Rustici and D'Anna turned to producing, and Rustici today has a recording studio in
Some of the Osanna CDs are Fonit Cetra's own releases and some are Fonit Cetra-labelled Vinyl Magic "Limited Editions." The latter include the first and fourth Osanna albums and the Uno album. I'm not sure how "limited" these in fact are, but I believe all are still available. (In addition, two of these albums -- MILANO CALIBRO 9 and PALEPOLI -- were released on CD in
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