Showing posts with label Nathalie Loriers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nathalie Loriers. Show all posts

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Nathalie Loriers - Nympheas

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:27
Size: 115,8 MB
Art: Front

(9:35)  1. Désirs de Kiwis
(5:26)  2. Black Is Hard
(4:49)  3. Nat's Blues
(6:39)  4. Peace
(5:35)  5. Arica
(5:49)  6. Pleine lune
(6:02)  7. Nympheas
(6:27)  8. Nardis

Nathalie Loriers is a pianist of jazz Belgian born in Namur on 27 October 1966 and a native of Andenne. Trained in classical music, Nathalie Loriers quickly turned to jazz. Influenced by her professors Steve Houben and Charles Loos , barely 23 years old, the Belgian association of jazz critics elected him in 1989 "Best young talent in the country." The following year, she received the first prize for piano and jazz harmony at the Brussels Royal Conservatory of Music and the title of "Best Young Soloist" at the Brussels Jazz Rally. In 1999, she received an award DjangodOr and released the album Silent Spring. With his group, she won in 2000 the Eurodjango and price Bobby Jaspar awarded by the Academy of Jazz . 

Within a few years of career, Nathalie Loriers occurred over a dozen albums. She has worked with world-renowned musicians, including Toots Thielemans , Lee Konitz , Diederik Wissels and the singer David Linx , with whom she recorded Standards, released in 1997. Strongly influenced by his mentor Charles Loos, she released the album in 2002 titled Timbuktu. In 2004, she formed the duo crossed paths with the oud player Tunisian Yadh Elyes . Their repertoire is written by Nathalie Loriers and Yadh Elyes. The compositions are steeped in jazz and meditative oriental music. Since May 2005, the young Belgian-Jordanian oud player, Karim Baggili replaces Yadh Elyes within the group. Translate by google ~ http://translate.google.com.br/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&u=http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathalie_Loriers&prev=search

Featuring : Nathalie Loriers (piano), Philippe Aerts (bass), Kurt Van Herck (saxophone), Mimi Verderame (drums)