Showing posts with label Jacques Loussier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jacques Loussier. Show all posts

Thursday, March 16, 2023

Jacques Loussier - The Best of Play Bach

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2020
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:00
Size: 65,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:35) 1. Air on the G String
(4:34) 2. Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring
(4:19) 3. Chorale No. 1
(3:26) 4. Chromatic Fantasy
(3:56) 5. D Minor Concerto (Adagio)
(4:24) 6. D Minor Concerto (Allegro Moderato)
(9:48) 7. D Minor Concerto (Allegro Risoluto)
(4:54) 8. Italian Concerto (Adagio)
(4:57) 9. Italian Concerto (Allegro)
(3:02) 10. Italian Concerto (Presto)
(4:38) 11. Prelude No. 2
(3:34) 12. Siciliano in G Minor
(9:23) 13. Toccata & Fugue in D Minor
(5:25) 14. Prelude No. 1

Jacques Loussier was born in Angers, in northwestern France, October 26, 1934. He started playing piano at the age of ten and quickly demonstrated tremendous ability. When Loussier was just sixteen, he entered the Conservatoire Nationale de Musique in Paris where he studied with Professor Yves Nat whose youthful compositions were praised by Faure and Saint-Saëns, and whose prodigious gifts as a pianist were encouraged by Debussy. Continuing this distinguished lineage, Loussier was to become one of Nat’s most accomplished pupils, heading the conservatory’s piano class of over five hundred students before leaving to commence a freelance career that included travels to South America and the Middle East as well as work as accompanist for Catherine Sauvage and Charles Aznavour.

In 1959, Loussier hit upon the idea that was to make his international reputation, combining his interest in jazz with his love of J.S. Bach. Only a pianist with such an exceptional classical technique and deft improvisatory skill could have nurtured such a vision. He founded the Play Bach Trio, which used Bach’s compositions as the basis for jazz improvisation. The trio immediately caught the public imagination. In their live appearances, tours and concerts, plus a succession of recordings built on the cornerstone of four albums made for Decca between 1960 and 1963, Loussier’s group achieved a breakthrough to popular commercial success enjoyed by only a select few jazz musicians. In fifteen years, the trio sold over six million albums.

During its heyday, the trio broadened the range of its experiments with Loussier double tracking some pieces on organ and piano and, later, recording some of his arrangements of Bach’s concerti with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. However, after years on the road, like many popular commercial groups, the original trio reached the end of its natural life in 1978. In 1980, Loussier retired to his home in Provence to compose, research and record. He had already dabbled in film and ballet composition, and had established his own recording studio at Miraval, not far from Nice, where in addition to composing his own pieces for acoustic and electronic instruments, he played host to many recording stars of the rock world including Pink Floyd, Elton John, Sting and Yes. In fact, segments of Pink Floyd’s The Wall were recorded at Loussier’s studio.

Loussier’s own music in the 1980s explored the integration of new technology with conventional instruments, just as his 1950s experiments explored the ground between jazz and classics. He produced suites for piano, synthesizers, percussion and bass, and some rock-jazz-classical fusion works including Pulsions, Pagan Moon and Fusions Sous La Mer.

The tercentenary of Bach’s birth in 1985 coaxed Loussier back to the trio format, and he re-formed the Play Bach Trio with two new partners. He feels his new trio has far more stylistic range than its predecessor, and whereas that was a pioneer group, the latter-day trio combines jazz, rock and contemporary classical ideas with a mix of jazz and Bach.

The trio keeps up a busy touring schedule, traveling annually in Japan and the U.K. as well as in Loussier’s native France. It also appears regularly in Germany, Spain and Italy. Loussier leaves plenty of room in his schedule to write his own compositions. In 1986, he produced a mass entitled Lumières, his first full-scale work for symphony orchestra, which continues his exploration of the synthesis of musical genres. In its Paris premiere, classical countertenor James Bowman and soprano Deborah Rees found themselves singing alongside a rock drummer. Loussier has subsequently written a trumpet and violin concerto (both in 1988), a suite for string, Tableaux Venetiens, and a ballet, Trois Couleurs (1989), to celebrate the bi-centenary of the French Revolution.

His first Telarc release, Jacques Loussier Plays Bach, debuted in 1996. His next recording, Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, unlocked a new vein of creativity and self-discovery, in which Loussier searched for a deeper level of exploration altogether. He followed up this excursion into the Italian baroque with Jacques Loussier Plays Satie, a look at the founding father of French minimalism. His exceptional 1999 release, Ravel’s Bolero, explored Loussier’s very personal connection to the work of the French impressionists. The Bach Book/40th Anniversary Album, a new recording of Loussier’s best-selling works from the ‘60s was also released in 1999. In 2000, for the first time ever, Loussier tackled the monumental Goldberg Variations, in honor of the 250th anniversary of the death of J.S. Bach. Recent releases from Jacques Loussier include Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 (2003) and The Best of Play Bach (SACD only) in February 2004.

Impressions of Chopin’s Nocturnes, Loussier’s first solo piano recording and an intimate exploration of the works of Frederic Chopin, was released on Loussier’s 70th birthday in October 2004. He returned to the trio setting a year later with the October 25, 2005, release of Mozart Piano Concertos 20/23.

Loussier returned to his roots in the Bach canon with the 2006 release of Bach: The Brandenburgs, a jazz interpretation of Bach’s six Brandenburg Concertos.

In October 2007, Telarc released Encore! Jacques Loussier Plays Bach, a two-disc set that includes recordings from the early 1990s " the period immediately following a lengthy hiatus when Loussier disbanded his original Play Bach Trio and took time off from the rigors of recording and performing to focus on his own compositions. The set spotlights Loussier’s numerous strengths as both a jazz innovator and a classical composer. Disc 1, recorded in 1991, features the new Loussier Trio assembled in the late ’80s after the hiatus. Disc 2, recorded in 1992, features original classical compositions by Loussier, in which he stays true to the sound of a chamber orchestra, using the string textures familiar from his immersion in the music of the baroque era, but also brings in contemporary resonances, both in the solo parts and in the percussion contributions.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/jacques-loussier

The Best of Play Bach

Sunday, January 15, 2023

Jacques Loussier - Play Bach (5-CD Box Set)

Jacques Loussier - Play Bach Disc 1
Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1959/2020
Time: 34:56
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 81,1 MB
Art: Front

(5:24) 1. Prélude No.1 En Ut Majeur, Bwv 846
(5:00) 2. Fugue No.1 En Ut Majeur, Bwv 846
(4:18) 3. Prélude No.2 En Ut Mineur, Bwv 847
(2:45) 4. Fugue No.2 En Ut Mineur, Bwv 847
(8:53) 5. Toccata Et Fugue En Ré Mineur, Bwv 565
(4:53) 6. Prélude No.8 En Ré Dièse Majeur, Bwv 853
(1:51) 7. Prélude No.5 En Ré Majeur, Bwv 850
(1:49) 8. Fugue No.5 En Ré Majeur, Bwv 850

Jacques Loussier - Play Bach Disc 2
Time: 36:48
Size: 85,9 MB

(6:16) 1. Partita N 1 Bwv 825 En Si Bémol Majeur-allemande (Album Version)
(2:28) 2. Partita N 1 Bwv 825 En Si Bémol Majeur-courante (Album Version)
(2:54) 3. Partita N 1 Bwv 825 En Si Bémol Majeur-sarabande (Album Version)
(1:57) 4. Partita N 1 Bwv 825 En Si Bémol Majeur-menuet I (Album Version)
(1:56) 5. Partita N 1 Bwv 825 En Si Bémol Majeur-menuet Ii (Album Version)
(3:07) 6. Partita N 1 Bwv 825 En Si Bémol Majeur-gigue (Album Version)
(4:09) 7. Cantate N 147 Bwv 147 Herz Und Mund Und Tat Und Leben (Album Version)
(2:06) 8. Prélude N 6 En Ré Mineur Clavier Bien Tempere Livre I Bwv 851
(3:26) 9. Suite Pour Orchestre N 3 En Ré Majeur Bwv 1068 (Aria)
(2:54) 10. Prélude N 16 En Sol Majeur Clavier Bien Tempere Livre I Bwv 861
(2:43) 11. Fugue N 16 En Sol Mineur Clavier Bien Tempere Livre I Bwv 861
(2:46) 12. Prélude N 21 En Si Bemol Majeur Clavier Bien Tempere Livre I Bwv 866 (Album Version)

Jacques Loussier - Play Bach Disc 3
Time: 36:13
Size: 84,3 MB

(5:34) 1. Concerto Italien Bwv 971 En Fa Majeur - Allegro
(4:36) 2. Concerto Italien Bwv 971 En Fa Majeur - Andante
(5:59) 3. Concerto Italien Bwv 971 En Fa Majeur - Finale
(2:20) 4. Invention À 2 Voix No 1 En Ut Majeur Bwv 772
(3:31) 5. Invention À 2 Voix No 13 En La Mineur Bwv 784
(2:42) 6. Invention À 2 Voix No 8 En Fa Majeur Bwv 779
(1:32) 7. Invention À 2 Voix No 14 En Si Bémol Majeur Bwv 785
(1:12) 8. Invention À 2 Voix No 15 En Si Mineur Bwv 786
(5:03) 9. Fantaisie En Ut Mineur Bwv 906
(3:40) 10. Cantate No 29 Bwv 29 - Ouverture

Jacques Loussier - Play Bach Disc 4
Time: 24:47
Size: 57,3 MB

( 4:00) 1. Choral Bwv 721 (Instrumental)
( 4:36) 2. Choral No 16 Bwv 684 (Instrumental)
(11:18) 3. Fantaisie Et Fugue En Sol Mineur Bwv 542
( 4:52) 4. Choral No 1 Bwv 645 (Instrumental)

Jacques Loussier - Play Bach Disc 5
Time: 33:20
Size: 77,1 MB

( 7:41) 1. Toccata En Ut Majeur Bwv 564 Toccata (Instrumental)
( 3:42) 2. Toccata En Ut Majeur Bwv 564 Adagio (Instrumental)
( 3:44) 3. Toccata En Ut Majeur Bwv 564 Fugue (Instrumental)
( 3:31) 4. Sonate Pour Flute Et Clavecin En Mi Bemol Majeur Bwv 1031 (Sicilienne En Sol Mineur)
(12:00) 5. 6 Chorals Schubler Bwv 645 Choral N 1 (Reveillez-vous La Voix Des Vei)
( 2:40) 6. Passacaille En Ut Mineur Bwv 582 (Theme)

Pianist Jacques Loussier has spent much of his career performing Bach melodies with his jazz group. Loussier's Play Bach Trio was quite popular during 1959-1978. After a few years off, he formed a new trio along similar lines in 1985, the group heard on this CD.

Although jazz and classical music have been combined together in many different ways through the years, no combo has worked harder at swinging Bach than Loussier's units. The pianist pays respect to Bach's melodies before swinging them and his improvisations are a natural outgrowth of the themes. This CD gives listeners an excellent example of his concept and is a constant delight.By Scott Yanow
https://www.allmusic.com/album/jacques-loussier-plays-bach-mw0001939493

Play Bach

Friday, April 17, 2020

Jacques Loussier - Beautiful Love

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:56
Size: 180,3 MB
Art: Front

( 4:37)  1. Andante
( 5:04)  2. Fantasy in C Minor
( 2:43)  3. Mack the Knife
( 4:02)  4. Aie Pitié De Moi, Ô Seigneur Dieu
( 3:26)  5. Air (Orchestral Suite No. 3)
( 2:58)  6. Sarabande
(11:20)  7. Fantaisie Et Fugue En Sol Mineur
( 3:47)  8. Stay Well
( 2:27)  9. Mon Ami, My Friend
( 4:08) 10. Jesu, Joy of Man's Desire
( 6:19) 11. Prelude No. 1
( 2:40) 12. Polly's Song
( 2:00) 13. Le Tango Des Matelots
( 4:38) 14. Concerto After the Italian Taste
( 2:56) 15. Prelude No. 16
( 2:45) 16. Oh, Heart of Love
( 5:05) 17. Fantaisie En Ut Mineur
( 1:59) 18. Minuet 1 & 2
( 4:54) 19. Prelude No. 8

An acclaimed French pianist known for his jazz interpretations of classical works, Jacques Loussier rose to prominence leading his trio in the 1960s. A gifted classical musician in his youth, Loussier gravitated toward jazz and issued a series of innovative, genre-bending albums under the Play Bach title in which he reworked the music of Johanne Sebastian Bach. Over the years, he applied this same approach to works by other classical composers, and even expanded his palette, exploring electronics and Latin-traditions on albums like 1979's Pulsion, 1999's Ravel: Bolero, and 2011's Schumann: Kinderszenen (Scenes from Childhood). He also composed for film and television, working out of his Studio Miraval in Provence. Following a stroke in 2011 he retired from the stage and passed away in 2019 at the age of 84. Loussier was born in 1934 in Angers, France to a banker and homemaker. He first started taking piano lessons around age ten. Soon after, he discovered the music of Bach, including pieces like "Notebook for Anna Magdalena Bach" and "Prelude in G Minor." He became entranced, often improvising naturally upon the themes in the pieces. By his teens he had moved to Paris where he studied privately with noted pianist Yves Nat, delving deeper into Bach, as well as composers like Claude Debussy, Gabriel Fauré, and Camille Saint-Saëns. He enrolled at the Conservatoire National Musique and continued to expand his skills outside of class playing jazz gigs at local bars. While at school he began to compose, and further solidified his third stream approach fusing classical with jazz.

Following his graduation, he embarked on a fruitful career as an accompanist, working with a bevy of marquee singers including Charles Aznavour, Frank Alamo, Catherine Sauvage, and others. He was able to travel and soak up the musical traditions of other parts of the world including that of the Middle East and Latin America. He also formed his own trio with bassist Pierre Michelot and drummer Christian Garros. Known for their jazz reworkings of Bach pieces, the trio debuted with a series of albums on Decca beginning with Play Bach No. 1 in 1959 and culminating in Play Bach Aux Champs Elysees in 1965. A major success for Loussier, the trio toured and recorded for 15 years, moving from Decca to Philips/Phonogram in the early '70s and selling over six million albums. The trio gained wider public recognition when their version of Bach's "Air on the G String," which was used in a series of award-winning Benson & Hedges television commercials. Along with leading his trio, Loussier began composing for film and television, issuing soundtracks for projects like 1967's The Killing Game, 1968's The Dark of the Sun, and 1969's You Only Love Once, among others. In the early '70s, he disbanded his trio and settled in Provence, where he opened his own recording studio, Studio Miraval. In addition to producing his own projects there, Miraval has played host to a variety of artists over the years including Elton John, Sting, and Pink Floyd. Away from his trio, Loussier began to expand his musical palette, exploring electronics, funk, and Latin sounds on albums like 1979's Pulsion, and 1982's Pagan Moon. In 1985, inspired by the 300th anniversary of Bach's birth, Loussier formed a second version of his trio, again playing a mix of classical and jazz with many of the added stylistic textures he had adopted since the group's start. Working with his second trio, Loussier continued to find a receptive audience issuing albums like 1996's Jacques Loussier Plays Bach, which landed at number 33 on the Billboard Classical Albums chart.

More albums followed including 1999's Bach Book: 40th Anniversary Album and Ravel: Bolero, both of which featured his signature classical and jazz mix. In 2000, Loussier paired his trio with Turkish pianists Güher and Süher Pekinel for Take Bach. Baroque Favorites: Jazz Improvisations arrived in 2001 and peaked in the Top 50 of the Billboard Classical Albums chart. There were similarly well-regarded recordings of Beethoven, Mozart, and Chopin. In 2002, Loussier filed a lawsuit against rapper Eminem and executive producer Dr. Dre, claiming that portions of their track "Kill You" were stolen from his composition "Pulsion." The lawsuit was ultimately settled out of court. In 2009, the then-75-year-old pianist issued the trio album Plays Bach: The 50th Anniversary Recording. He then applied his distinctively cross-pollinated voice to Robert Schumann's 1838 composition with 2011's Schumann: Kinderszenen (Scenes from Childhood). Loussier suffered a stroke in 2011 and retired from performing. He died on March 5, 2019 at a hospital in Blois, in France’s Loire Valley. He was 84 years old. ~ Matt Collar https://www.allmusic.com/artist/jacques-loussier-mn0000122083/biography

Beautiful Love

Saturday, May 18, 2019

Jacques Loussier Trio - Ravel's Boléro

Styles: Piano
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:55
Size: 124,5 MB
Art: Front

(17:15)  1. Ravel's Boléro
( 6:10)  2. Nymphéas I. Allegro
( 5:45)  3. Nymphéas II. Andante
( 5:29)  4. Nymphéas III. Vivace
( 6:02)  5. Nymphéas IV. Largo
( 3:54)  6. Nymphéas V. Presto
( 3:08)  7. Nymphéas VI. Cantabile
( 4:08)  8. Nymphéas VII. Prestissimo

As with his CD The Bach Book , Jacques Loussier is again embellishing the work of another master composer on this recent Telarc release entitled Ravel's Bolero. This CD is as much, and even more so about Loussier's own compositional abilities, for with the exception of the title cut, all songs were composed and arranged by Loussier. As great a record as the Bach Book is, Bolero easily surpasses it on many different levels. Maybe it's the fact that Loussier and Ravel share a common heritage and nationality, or that Loussier's formative years where spent studying with Yves Nat, himself a disciple of Ravel. It's this reviewers opinion that Ravel is just more of a modern figure than Bach, and being that there is less of a gap in the lineage between Ravel and modern players like Loussier, Ravel's music is simply more accessible, leaving a lot of space for creative improvisations. Take the title cut for example, an extended line played over a pedal point. With such minimalism at work, Loussier is able to extend over and beyond the composers harmonic conception, by improvising complex lines that revolve around, and are at times intertwined with original theme. A feeling of impressionism and noir prevail throught this CD from the opening Bolero, which faithfully reproduces the exotic flavor of Ravel's original score, within the confines of the piano trio. Although the piece Nympheas, with it's seven movements, was composed by Loussier; it's various themes filled with violent storms and eerie silence, manage to suggest melodies and harmonies found within the repetitive structure of Ravel's Bolero. 

It is clear that Loussier and trio are playing off one another, and demonstrating extreme control over the use of time, tone, and timbre. The music on this disc represents homage being paid to one master gone, from another master living. ~ AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/ravels-bolero-telarc-records-review-by-aaj-staff.php

Personnel: Jacques Loussier (piano); Benoit Dunoyer De Segonzac (bass); Andre' Arpino (drums)

Ravel's Boléro