Artist's albums
Isn't It Romantic?
2001 · album
Two for the Cities
2001 · album
Gianni Basso Plays Ballads
2001 · album
Italian Balladeur
1996 · album
Steppin' Out
1996 · album
Maestro+Maestro=Exciting Duo
1983 · album
Quartetto Gianni Basso
1980 · album
Recado Bossa Nova
2017 · album
Gianni Basso in Bari (You're My Everything)
2012 · album
Stardust
2011 · album
For Lars Gullin Vol. 1
2010 · album
Basso e contrabbasso
2010 · album
Sweet And Lovely
2010 · album
Twilight
2010 · album
A la france vol 2
2009 · compilation
Body And Soul
2008 · album
O Amor em Paz (Mais uma... Para A. C. Jobim)
2006 · album
Makin' Whoopee
2003 · album
Duets
2003 · album
Recado, Vol. 2
2003 · album
Two Generations Chapter One
2003 · album
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Biography
Gianni Basso was one of the lights who began shining on the European jazz scene following the end of World War II. He began as a clarinetist and first played professionally in Germany and Belgium in the late '40s with the Raoul Falsan Big Band. By the beginning of the next decade, he was established as a commercial "GB" or "general business" player in Milan, but one with a steady presence at jazz events, including some of the early Italian attempts at post-fascist festivals. From about 1954, a collaboration with trumpeter and composer Oscar Valdambrini began that resembled the relationship between Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn, minus the former man's household-name status. Basso studied music in the busy northern city of Turin, where Valdambrini was a homeboy. It was more than just two Italian lads growing up with a fascination for American jazz -- this was a case of a tenor saxophone and trumpet finding each other. This led to all manner of musical possibilities, most notably the easy-to-maneuver-and-feed small combo (not that feeding anyone in Italy is a problem, ever). The partners' group was without a doubt the most popular jazz band in Italy in the '50s, accompanying many touring stars such as Billie Holiday, Lionel Hampton, Gerry Mulligan, Slide Hampton, and Chet Baker. The engaging style of tenor saxophonist Stan Getz was the primary goal Basso set for himself in terms of having a main man on the saxophone. His many subsequent recordings provide documentation of how he discovered Sonny Rollins and developed his own style from these sources to the point where the Verve label signed him and a top-notch singer such as Sarah Vaughan wanted a Basso baste as sauce on her 1984 serving entitled Mystery of Man. In the late '70s he founded the band Saxes Machine and subsequently fronted the Gianni Basso Big Band. In his senior years he settled into the comfort of the Rome studio scene, still playing in clubs and enjoying his growing historical stature on the European jazz scene. Even free jazz fans like him now. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, Rovi