This is how the composer describes the album. I've been part of the small Ensemble.
"This Album started its life as the soundtrack of "Sow The Wind", a movie by Danilo Caputo that was presented at the 71th Berlinale Film Festival.
The title comes from ’Magic: A Theory from the South or 'Sud e Magia' in italian, a seminal 1959 anthropological study by E. De Martino which investigated the persistence of pagan rituals in the southern regions of Italy.
The movie is staged in one of those Italian southern regions, where everyday life is interwoven with ancient beliefs in magical forces, coexisting with catholic religion and even science. The book itself was one of the references me and the director used as a starting point for the soundtrack. The films chronicles the struggle of Nica, a young women trying to reclaim her ancestral home
It was a lengthy process, we explored several avenues, listened to a lot of Toru Takemitsu - mostly for the connection his music has with nature - and eventually decided for a few cardinal elements: a custom scale was created and used to build modal harmony, which would inform a lot of the music written, the music had to be played by a small ensemble and rhythmically I would use euclidean rhythms as their circular qualities fitted with the cyclical phases of nature. The influence of the ancient Greek mythology and its cultural dominance on the region was also part of the process."
Listen on Spotify: Sud e Magia
"Filippo is one of the most outstanding musicians around. The soul and emotion you hear in every piece he plays, it’s Filippo’s heart coming through his fingers. He does that effortlessly like only the most gifted musicians can. He’s a true brother, I don’t know what I would do without him. "
VALERIO CAMPORINI FAGGIONI
Composer, arranger.