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Canadian guitarist Aldo Nova (born Aldo Caporuscio in Montreal) was a
relatively late bloomer musically, not learning how to play the instrument
until he was 15. However, inspired by the playing of Jimi
Hendrix and with a keen interest in jazz, Nova worked obsessively to
master the instrument (along with keyboards) and became a hometown hero in
the local clubs. While playing George
Harrison in a production of Beatlemania, he worked after hours as a
studio engineer and a 1982 publishing deal led to his signing with
Portrait Records. Given the luxury of producing himself, Nova's debut that
summer contained songs that he had recorded over the previous several
years. The self-titled release was a surprise success, selling over a
million copies in the U.S. and reaching the Top Ten, driven by the
blistering "Fantasy," which not only found favor at AOR
stations, but, bolstered by MTV's support of the video, also peaked on the
pop charts at number 25. When Nova issued the follow-up, Subject...Aldo
Nova, a year later, there was increased emphasis on synthesizers
and it featured more ballads, although the lone track to make inroads at
radio was the anti-drug anthem "Monkey on Your Back," which was
as heavy as anything on his debut.
Despite that song receiving significant
airplay on rock stations, the set's single, "Always Be Mine,"
was a commercial failure and Subject
struggled to achieve gold status. Nova found himself in demand as a player
and writer, though, during this period, working with artists such as Blue
Öyster Cult, Michael
Bolton, and Lita Ford. Pressured by his label to use outside writers and musicians (he
had handled almost every aspect of his previous efforts), Twitch
was virtually ignored upon its 1985 release, failing to chart and
receiving little attention from radio. It would be six years before Nova
returned with Blood
on the Bricks, a record released on Jon
Bon Jovi's Jambco imprint (Nova had appeared on his multi-platinum Young
Guns II soundtrack). However, in the face of a changing musical
landscape (grunge had made Nova's style of metal-pop less relevant), it
too vanished quickly. Epic culled together the best of his first three
releases, releasing a fine career overview with A
Portrait of Aldo Nova in 1992 and Nova returned with Nova's
Dream five years later.
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