Oraison Raphaël Imbert

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2021

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
22.06.2021

Label: Outnote Records

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Contemporary Jazz

Interpret: Raphaël Imbert

Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)

?

Formate & Preise

Format Preis Im Warenkorb Kaufen
FLAC 48 $ 14,90
  • 1 For years (I) 02:19
  • 2 Oraison 05:07
  • 3 1851 03:22
  • 4 Straßen des Gedenkens 05:47
  • 5 Oraison d’Émile Latil 01:34
  • 6 L’Atlantique 09:09
  • 7 Oraison belliqueuse 04:36
  • 8 For years (II) 01:56
  • 9 Chant de bataille 05:30
  • 10 Ode à Odde l'Auguste 07:58
  • 11 Oraison d'Eugène Revest 02:34
  • 12 L'espace des feux 08:44
  • 13 Oraison de Clément Plane 03:47
  • 14 Timon en berceuse 02:19
  • 15 Petite sauce couleur garance 02:33
  • 16 Malo's sunset 06:18
  • 17 For years (III) 01:33
  • Total Runtime 01:15:06

Info zu Oraison

Oraison is a musical meditation on memory, history and time, articulated in a jazz idiom. Raphaël Imbert bases his reflection on his own experience as a resident of a village in Haute Provence, Oraison, which is the only village in France to have given its streets the names of soldiers who died in combat during the Great War, or in an act of resistance during the Second World War. The name ‘Oraison’ is thought to have Provençal origins and to mean ‘the place where the wind blows’. Where the spirit blows! Oraison, a series of original compositions which take the form of a textless secular oratorio, is an opportunity for Raphaël Imbert to propose a spiritual and narrative journey with a precise plan, a series of evocative portraits, a different way of remembering, a means of living and reliving through a memory enriched by creation. A deep and communicative emotion that can flower to the full in the ‘classical’ quartet format of sax-piano-double bass-drums, in the company of some of the most innovative improvisers on the French jazz scene.

Raphaël Imbert Quartet:
Raphaël Imbert, saxophone
Vincent Lafont, piano
Pierre Fenichel, double bass
Mourad Benhammou, drums




Raphaël Imbert
saxophonist and jazz composer, recipient of a ‘Villa Médicis hors les murs’ award for his research into sacred music and jazz, who won the 28th national jazz competition at La Défense in 2005 with his ensemble Newtopia. Selfmade man, Raphaël Imbert started jazz at Marseille Conservatory with Philippe Renault and met there regional musicans with whom he plays regularly (Emile Atsas, Jean-Luc Difraja, Vincent Lafont, Pierre Fenichel...). He wins with Jean-Jacques Élangué the first price of Marseille Conservatory and creates 2 groups "Hemlé orchestra" and " Atsas imbert consort", with whom he will play in numerous festivals (Vienne, Nice, Fiesta des Suds, Théâtre des Salins...). He develops his taste for composition and the most eclectic musical situations. He creates a vision of music and jazz connected to spirituality very essential to the jazzman approach. For this purpose, he creates « Nine Spirit » to play "sacred music" of Duke Ellington, John Coltrane, Pharoah Sanders, Albert Ayler and others, and to produce shows which are inspired by powerful texts written by Théodore Monod, Amadou Hampatê Bâ, Martin Luther King ... Raphaël Imbert worked on a study focused on the Sacred in Jazz and becomes recipient of Villa Médicis Hors Les Murs, managed by AFAA and the french foreign affairs ministry which enabled him to stay in New York during october 2003. Raphaël Imbert develops many teaching project in Marseille Conservatory, at Festival Cluny and Fai’art. He belongs to the Orchestre National de Jazz administration board since september 2004 and wins the 28th national jazz competition at La Défense in 2005 with his ensemble Newtopia. He writes music for cinema and television for Philippe Carrése et Isabelle Boni-Claverie projects. Raphaël Imbert manages 2 groups within the Nine Spirit Company, 2 records are released with Zig Zag Territoires Label : la Suite Elegiaque"with Newtopia Project (ZZT 061103) , and a special christmas album, Pieces for Christmas Peace with Sixtine Group distribution Harmonia Mundi.

Booklet für Oraison

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO