ICTUS Records is an avant-garde jazz record label founded in 1976 by Andrea Centazzo and Carla Lugli.[1][2][3][4]
ICTUS Records | |
---|---|
Founded | 1976 |
Founder | Andrea Centazzo, Carla Lugli |
Genre | Jazz |
Country of origin | Italy |
Official website | www |
History
editICTUS in Bologna, Italy
- Andrea Centazzo and his wife at the time, Carla Lugli, founded ICTUS in Bologna, Italy, in 1976.[5] Centazzo is a drummer, percussionist, electronicist, and composer. ICTUS folded in 1984 due to financial duress and the divorce of Centazzo and Lugli.[6]
ICTUS in Long Beach, California
- Centazzo revived ICTUS in 2006 in Long Beach, California,[7] initially, to raise funds for Bosnian refugees.[2] On January 1, 2006, ICTUS released ICTUS Records' 30th Anniversary Collection, a 12-volume CD retrospective of its work.[8] In 2010, ICTUS released its Ictus 35th Anniversary Collection on 1 CD.[9]
Selected artists
edit- Derek Bailey
- Kent Carter
- Andrea Centazzo
- Lol Coxhill
- Andrew Cyrille
- Pierre Favre
- Robert Gluck
- Noboru Jones
- Steve Lacy
- Guido Mazzon
- Aran Ortiz
- Gianluigi Trovesi
- Roberto Zorzi
- Rova Saxophone Quartet
- Confusion Bleue (Chris Kelsey (soprano sax), Nobu Stowe (keyboards), Ross Bonadonna (guitars, alto sax, bass clarinet), Ray Sage (drums), Lee Pemberton (sound))[10]
Other labels and studios by the same name
edit- Free jazz artists Ed Summerlin and Don Heckman recorded three albums between 1965 and 1967 on a label of the same name;[10] but that label was not affiliated with that of this article.
- Producciones Ictus, aka ICTUS Studios, is based in Mexico City and is not affiliated
References
edit- ^ Lexikon des Jazz (in German), Jürgen Wölfer (ed.), Sankt Andrä-Wördern, Austria: Hannibal Verlag (1999); OCLC 246200865
- ^ a b Free Jazz and Free Improvisation: An Encyclopedia, Vol. 1 (A–J), by Todd S. Jenkins, Greenwood Press (2004), pg. 182; OCLC 873596704, 61142235
- ^ "Review: Danger High Voltage", by arwulf arwulf (fi) (pseudonym of Theodore R. Grenier; born 1957), AllMusic (retrieved 16 April 2014)
- ^ "About Ictus". Ictus Records. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
- ^ "New Companies", Billboard, December 15, 1976, Vol. 88, No. 52, pg. 61, col. 2; ISSN 0006-2510
- ^ Breznikar, Klemen (May 13, 2012). "Andrea Centazzo interview". It's Psychedelic Baby! Magazine. Archived from the original on August 14, 2017. Retrieved December 24, 2020.
- ^ "ICTUS Records Nights @ The Stone (NYC) April 1-14", by Michael Ricci, All About Jazz, March 21, 2012
- ^ ICTUS Records' 30th Anniversary Collection, ICTUS Records (2006); OCLC 69017094
- ^ ICTUS 35th Anniversary Collection, ICTUS Records (2010); OCLC 805069015
- ^ a b TJD Online, Tom Lord (ed.), Chilliwack, Canada: Lord Music Reference Inc. (retrieved 16 April 2014); OCLC 182585494, 690104143