Louise Jallu – Piazzolla 2021 (2021)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/48 kHz | Time – 59:21 minutes | 652 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Klarthe
Too few are those who will have been able to rise to the height of this statuary monument during their lifetime, only remaining on the surface when this multifaceted personality invites a much more complex reading. It is this Himalayas that Louise Jallu dared to climb. Far from sinking into the pale copy, Louise Jallu adds her comments, notably opening up spaces suitable for improvisation, even if it means taking the bias of a certain irreverence to show all the better all her deference to the Argentinean . History of sticking to the singular post-modernity that inhabited his work. As obvious.
Although she was born, clutching a bandoneon, in Gennevilliers, Hauts-de-Seine, Louise Jallu continues her career at the service of the music of the Buenos Aires slums: the powerful Tango. In defying sexist and geographical taboos, although France has a soft spot for Argentine expression, her approach is holistic and luminous. In particular, she built her encompassing love on the back of the intoxicating work of Astor Piazzolla, the great revolutionary of this ecstatic form of musical expression, a lover of classical music who broadened its horizons and blazed it a path to modernity and freedom. At the head of her brilliant quartet, rounded out by Mathias Lévy (violin and guitar), Marc Benham (piano) and Alexandre Perrot (double bass), Louise Jallu pays tribute to the master on the occasion of the hundredth anniversary of his birth. A tribute that matches the stature of its subject, it is respectfully inventive.
For proof, just listen to the unexpected revival of the classic Libertango. Or indeed see the presence of Gustavo Beytelmann, Piazzolla pianist from the 70s who caresses the ebony and ivory on half of the covers gathered here. Like Piazzolla himself, Jallu flirts with the spirit of jazz, taking risks, while favouring swing and an atmosphere of passion. On Oblivion, a composition from the later part of the big beast’s life, she invites one of the most daring bugle players of the French jazz scene, Médéric Collignon. Even in the Porteño district of San Telmo that saw the birth of tango, Piazzolla 2021 should command much admiration. Louise Jallu brings a very contemporary and personal dimension, coloured by her origins. She co-wrote the arrangements with the director of the Gennevilliers Conservatory, Bernard Cavanna, a contemporary pianist and composer, a companion of Henri Dutilleux and Georges Aperghis, who certainly encouraged revolutionary aspirations in his former student. – Benjamin MiNiMuM
Tracklist:
1. Soledad (feat. Mathias Lévy, Marc Benham & Alexandre Perrot) (4:47)
2. Tanguedia (feat. Mathias Lévy, Marc Benham, Alexandre Perrot & Gustavo Beytelman) (4:36)
3. Tristezas de un Doble A (Cadence au bandonéon) (2:36)
4. Tristezas de un Doble A (feat. Mathias Lévy, Marc Benham, Alexandre Perrot & Gustavo Beytelman) (8:27)
5. Libertango (feat. Mathias Lévy, Marc Benham, Alexandre Perrot & Gustavo Beytelman) (6:47)
6. Oblivion (feat. Mathias Lévy, Marc Benham, Alexandre Perrot & Mederic Collignon) (5:24)
7. Adiós Nonino (feat. Mathias Lévy, Marc Benham, Alexandre Perrot & Gustavo Beytelman) (8:20)
8. Mi Refugio (Bandonéon solo) (3:12)
9. Buenos Aires hora cero (feat. Mathias Lévy, Marc Benham, Alexandre Perrot & Gustavo Beytelman) (4:51)
10. Los sueños (feat. Mathias Lévy, Marc Benham & Alexandre Perrot) (4:13)
11. Lo Que Vendrá (feat. Mathias Lévy, Marc Benham, Alexandre Perrot & Gustavo Beytelman) (6:16)
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