Jacques Loussier
Jacques
Loussier was born in
In 1959, Loussier hit upon the idea that was to make his international reputation, by 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 the 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
Loussier's own music of 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 latterday trio combines jazz, rock and contemporary
classical ideas with the mix of jazz and Bach. The trio keeps up a busy touring
schedule, traveling annually in Japan and the
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.
In 2001, Loussier released Baroque Favorites, an innovative jazz-trio perspective on the works of Handel, Scarlatti, Pachelbel and other artists of the baroque period. A year later, he recorded Handel: Water Music & Fireworks. Loussier's most recent effort is Beethoven: Symphony No. 7, released in October 2003.
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