| Bordeaux - Carnaval des 2 rives 2008-2009 |
| Pourpour fait son carnaval |
| Fanfaron en tête |
| Que vive le carnaval |
| Voyage imaginaire |
| |
| Festival International du Film de Rouyn-Noranda |
| Odile Tremblay, le Devoir |
| |
| KARUSELL MUSIK |
| Karusell Musik, DAME |
| Dolf Mulder in Vital (Pays-Bas) |
| Dave Lynch in All-Music Guide (ÉU) |
| Biography par Dave Lynch |
| Alain Brunet, La Presse (Québec) |
| Louise Jalbert, Échos Vedettes (Québec) |
| Éric Aussant, Metro (Québec) |
| 24 heures (Québec) |
| Nicolas Houle, Le Soleil (Québec) |
| Rupert Bottenberg, Montreal Mirror (Québec) |
| Réjean Beaucage, Voir (Québec) |
| Yves Bernard, Ici Montréal (Québec) |
| Lisez
un article de Kim de Corta, 10 ans, sur la fanfare
Pourpour |
| |
| LE BAL |
| Le
Bal, Valérie Lesage, Le Soleil |
| Le
Bal, Plateauïforme, La Presse |
| Le
Bal, Frédérique Doyon, Le Devoir |
| Le
Bal, The Gazette |
| Le
Bal, Ici, Les Fanfarons |
| Le
Bal, Voir, Scène Locale |
| Le
Bal, Musique pour tous, La Presse |
| Le
Bal, Arts Life Rodriguez, The Gazette |
| Le
Bal, Pannuzo, Cittadino |
| Le
Bal, Beaucage, Scena Musicale |
| Le
Bal, ActuelCD Review |
| Le
Bal, Journal Montreal, Fête Printemps |
| Le
Bal, ActuelCD, Pub |
| Le
Bal, Radio-Canada, Pub |
| Le
Bal, Bob Cyber-Reporter |
| |
| Tout
Le Bal en PDF |
| |
| Le FIMAV Mai 2005 |
| Signal
to noise |
| Cadence
Roseinstein |
| FIMAV
Brunet-mai-05 |
| FIMAV
Gallanter |
| FIMAV
Beaucage Impro Jazz |
| FIMAV
Kelwan All about Jazz |
| FIMAV François Couture (Anglais) |
| FIMAV
François Couture (F) |
| |
| Tout
le FIMAV en PDF |
| Guelph
Jazz Festival, Thompson |
| Monsieur
Fauteux m'entendez-vous? |
| |
|
| AUTRES (Tout le Monde...) |
| Alain Brunet,
la Presse |
| Nicolas Titley, VOIR |
| Superboom |
| Coups de Coeur Francophones |
| Sylvain Cormier,
le Devoir |
| 25e anniversaire Rendez-vous
du Nouveau cinéma |
| Avec Raoul Petite |
| Les Troubadours |
| Pierre Boulet,
le Soleil |
| Alain Perron, le Plateau |
| La fanfare à
Paris |
| DAME |
| |
| Francine
Grimaldi |
| Club-Culture |
| Stephanne
Bergeron |
| CSN |
|
par Dave Lynch in All-Music
Guide (ÉU), 1 juin 2007
«Lars Hollmer and the Fanfare Pourpour pull the listener into
a world of joyous celebration, and one wishes the vibe could continue
long past the moment when the music has wound down into silence.»
In his many years of music-making the world over, perhaps nowhere has
Swedish composer, keyboardist, and accordionist Lars Hollmer consistently
found as many kindred spirits as in Quebec. Thankfully, Montreal musique
actuelle godfather Jean Derome has continued a transatlantic conversation
with Hollmer in the years since Derome joined the Swede’s Looping
Home Orchestra back in the early ‘90s, as documented on the Victo
label’s Door Floor Something Window live CD from 1993. Hollmer and
Derome have certainly kept busy with separate endeavors during the years
hence, but they are back together again on 2007’s Karusell Musik,
and a huge bunch of Derome’s Quebec friends are along for the ride
this time, recording in a Montreal studio during the fall of 2006 following
a pair of festival appearances in la belle province during 2004 and 2005.
Top billing on the CD cover goes to the wild, unruly, and fun-loving Fanfare
Pourpour big band, whose ranks swelled to 20 musicians (including Hollmer
and Derome), pumping away on instruments including accordions, clarinets,
saxophones, violins, flutes, guitars, mandolin, banjo, melodica, piccolo,
trumpet, euphonium, sousaphone, bass, drums, and percussion. Derome, whose
baritone sax is particularly impressive, orchestrated new versions of
Hollmer chestnuts dating all the way back to the first tune on his first
solo album, the sprightly waltz Avlägsen Strandvals from 1981’s
XII Sibiriska Cyklar. This song, featuring a vocal turn from Hollmer that
pushes well past merely enthusiastic, is one of 17 concise little numbers
-- usually in the range of two to three minutes long and nearly entirely
instrumentals -- performed with high energy and infectiously good spirits
by the gargantuan yet nimble aggregation. The opening tune, Ännu
Ingen Pelle, first heard on 1985’s Tonöga in a version with
Hollmer overdubbing all the instruments, leaps out of the gate with nearly
outrageous exuberance; it’s the sound of a berserk brass band running
amok as the composer rushes through the melody on his squeezebox, shouting
encouragement as the bandmembers clustered around him ratchet up the intensity
still further before the song slams to an abrupt finish.There are plenty
of appealing tunes on Karusell Musik that would seem ideal for revving
up the crowd at an Oktoberfest beer garden, driven by emphatic backbeats
or Hollmer’s signature syncopated rhythms (Ante Flöttar Ja
Te Sjöss, also from XII Sibiriska Cyklar; Skiss Mellan Brest Och
Segosero, again from Tonöga), along with interludes that take a more
avant-gardist stance but are refreshingly without the high-mindedness
that sometimes afflicts “serious” musical experimentalists.
In fact, there is a piece simply called Experiment, with herky-jerky stops
and starts as the Fanfare members shout and generally carry on in a crazy
counterpoint to Lars, who, way up front in the mix with a deep bass-baritone
vocal, speak-sings in cracked English that “This might be the most
difficult I ever made.” He wonders “if there is any reason
at all…to even try to do it,” except of course that “this
gives me always fun.” Appropriately, Experiment is followed by a
brief free-form improvised intro to the two Cirkus pieces from Hollmer’s
Swedish Grammy-winning Andetag, here given utterly madcap big-top readings.
And, as in its previous incarnations on the LHO’s Vendeltid in 1988
and the aforementioned Door Floor Something Window, Karusell Musik winds
faster and faster until it threatens to tumble off the rails, with its
dissonant two-chord intro and bridge hinting at the sometimes dark RIO
world that included not only Samla Mammas Manna but Univers Zero and Art
Zoyd in its roster of bands back in the day. This tune cried out for a
full-on large-ensemble arrangement, and the version here is arguably definitive.
The same might be said for the ever-popular Boeves Psalm and the album-closing
Simfågeldans, songs that ideally capture Hollmer’s singular
ability to mix the innocent with the bittersweet. Ever since Boeves Psalm
first appeared on XII Sibiriska Cyklar in a version with all instruments
overdubbed by Hollmer in his Chickenhouse studio, it has remained one
of his most well-known and best-loved numbers. Those who have heard and
admired Boeves Psalm played solo or by a small group need to hear it performed
by a 20-piece ensemble with diverse instrumentation and variegated textures
and timbres, and Karusell Musik provides just such a chance. This is,
after all, a piece that Guy Klucevsek described as “one of the most
beautiful melodies ever written” and “Blue” Gene Tyranny
has compared to Mozart. Here, as the charming theme progresses, it receives
the expected embellishments from strings and flute, horns, and then the
bass instruments and percussion with just the beautiful and dramatic buildup
you would hope for, and the Fanfare Pourpour prove themselves up to the
challenge in their expert balancing of neo-classical nuance and power.
Simfågeldans touches the emotions in a similar fashion to Boeves
Psalm, but with a livelier and more upbeat approach -- and as rendered
on Karusell Musik seems a perfect meld between Scandinavian folk melodicism
and the exuberant polyphony of New Orleans classic jazz. As they jam out
past two minutes after the closing theme, reaching and then retreating
from crescendos like a single ebbing and flowing organism, Lars Hollmer
and the Fanfare Pourpour pull the listener into a world of joyous celebration,
and one wishes the vibe could continue long past the moment when the music
has wound down into silence.
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