Maria Pia de Vito is an Italian vocalist, arranger, and multi-instrumentalist, who is as well known for her improvisational work as she is for interpreting jazz standards and international folk songs.
She was born in Naples in 1960, and began formal vocal studies as a child, studying opera and classical music as well as the Neapolitan folk tradition.
She began her performing career in 1976, playing with various workshop ensembles, singing, playing guitar, and later piano. Her earliest work was in ethnic and non-ethnic polyphony and folk music related to Mediterranean, Balkan, and South American countries.
In 1980,
De Vito began working in jazz circles with world-renowned musicians including
Paolo Fresu,
Bruno Tommaso, and
Gianluigi Trovesi. She also performed clubs and international festivals with
Joe Zawinul,
Michael Brecker,
Peter Erskine,
Miroslav Vitous,
Uri Caine,
Dave Liebman,
Billy Hart,
Steve Turre, Maria Joao,
the Art Ensemble of Chicago, and
Nguyen-Le.
De Vito sang everything from the bop and post-bop interpretations of the Great American Songbook and free singing to classical and neo-classical, as well as bringing her world music influences.
for her first recording in 1987, Mr. Frankenstein Blues, she fronted the
Tino Tracanna Sextet. Her first date as a leader was for Hit the Beast in 1989. She toured internationally and appeared on numerous recordings by Italian jazz artists including Piano & Bit by
Ernesto Vitolo, and
Mike Stern and
Toots Thielemans for RCA.
In 1994,
De Vito began a new phase of her career in a project conceived and co-directed with
Rita Marcotulli, which reflected vocal expression as sound in an encounter between jazz and Neapolitan singing, resulting in the albums Nauplia and Fore Paese in 1995 and 1996, respectively. In 1997, she released Phoné with pianist
John Taylor,
Trovesi, and others, with a selection of tunes ranging from the Italian Renaissance to the African Congo. It was performed at the Umbria Jazz Festival later that year. In 1998 she returned with
Marcotulli and vocalist and multi-instrumentalist
Arto Tuncboyaciyan for the release of Triboh. That same year she fronted
Tracanna's band for the landmark Gesualdo, a modern jazz portrait of the Italian madrigal composer's music. In 1999, she recorded with
Colin Towns' Mask Quintet for Still Life, and, along with singer
Norma Winstone, fronted his Mask Symphonic project (70 musicians strong) on Dreaming Man with Blue Suede Shoes.
In the late '90s,
De Vito toured the festival circuit in a trio with pianist
John Taylor and guitarist
Ralph Towner. They recorded their debut album, Verso, for Provocateur in 1998, and followed it a year later with Nel Respiro. In 2003, she released her own offering, Tumulti, backed by
Ernst Reijseger,
Patrice Heral, and
Paul Urbanek.
For the next two years, she sang on
Tommaso-led projects including Lettere da Orsara and Specula et Gemini with the Orchestra Jazz a Maiella. She collaborated with
David Linx,
Diederik Wissels, and
Fay Claassen on One Heart, Three Voices in 2005. That same year, her
So Right album appeared from Cam Jazz. Songs from the Underground was issued in 2007, followed by Mind the Gap in 2009, an experimental record that bridged free-form jazz, traditional European music, pop songs, and abstract electronica.
De Vito continued to collaborate with other artists and to tour in the ensuing years. In 2013, she made her
ECM debut with Il Pergolese, accompanied by
Francois Couturier,
Anja Lechner, and
Michele Rabbia. In 2017,
De Vito returned with Core, a Brazilian jazz-tinged effort featuring special guests
Chico Buarque,
Gabriele Mirabassi,
Roberto Taufic, and others. ~ Thom Jurek