Love and Sorrow 2011

In Autumn of 2010 Kavisha returned to work with Harry Williamson engineering, mixing and mastering at Spring Studio in Prahan with Nano Stern from Chile producing.This album featured 10 original songs from Kavisha who sang ,played accordion,guitar and Balinese flute and toys with strong support from world music veterans Irine Vela on Bouzouki and guitar,Peter Vadiveloo on Percussion and voice,Nano Stern on Fiddle, Electric Bass, Charango, Nylon String Guitar , percussion and voice, Kiki Wilmot on Backing Vocals,Steve Taberner on Double bass and voice and Harry Williamson on Vocals and gong. Kavisha won The National Film and Sound Archive Award for Best Folk Release of the National Folk Festival in Canberra in 2011.

Love & Sorrow

Kavisha Mazzella Black Market Music

**** (four stars)

‘TIS a musical match made in heaven, though forged in Melbourne during a break in one of Nano Stern’s tours. Local artist Kavisha Mazzella was destined to collaborate with the talented young Chilean, whose own work also exudes a Latin passion for life and travel, and a predisposition to break down musical and cultural barriers. Subtle multi-instrumental colouring from the album’s producer, allied to an exemplary sound engineering and mixing job by Harry Williamson, has helped convert a batch of characteristically well-crafted songs into Mazzella’s magnum opus. Love & Sorrow certainly has an epic sweep, reflecting the writer’s “travels and misadventures” near and far, the former in the case of the evocative St Kilda Lullaby, which poetically encapsulates the raffish charms of Melbourne’s beachside suburb in lines like: “Luna Park’s mask is grinning and blowing the breeze through the dark / The winos are dancing with shadows and glancing for cops as they sleep in the park”. Gecko Song, on the other hand, captures the velvety ambience of a tropical Southeast Asian night via a combination of Mazzella’s Balinese flute, Stern’s marimba and ukulele, and Williamson’s gamelan gong. Elsewhere, the South American’s nylon-string guitar and harmony singing provide simpatico support to the leader’s emotional vocals in Gethsemane and Magdalena. Charango adds a whiff of Andean air to Green Eyed Songbird. Mandolin and fiddle lend a classic British folk feel to All You Sailors.

Tony Hillier Weekend Australian

 

Track Listing All titles ©K Mazzella
1.Amour      05.24 
2.Gethsemane       05.19
3.Magdalena       04.00
4.Olive Tree       00.48
5.Victoria Markets   04.15
6. Green Eyed Songbird   04.48
7.Gecko Song    03.40
8.St Kilda Lullaby   05.09
9.All You Sailors   06.12
10.Harbour   03.47