Julien Lourau
Julien Lourau | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | 1970 (age 45–46) |
Origin | France |
Genres | Mainstream jazz, avant-garde jazz, Electronic |
Occupation(s) | Bandleader, composer |
Instruments | Tenor saxophone, alto saxophone |
Website | www.julienlourau.com |
Julien Lourau (born 1970) is a French jazz saxophonist. He is the son of sociologist René Lourau.
Julien Lourau made his début in the group Trash Corporation with guitarist Noël Akchoté and pianist Bojan Zulfikarpasic. He also founded the group Olympic Gramofon with Sébastien Martel, Vincent Ségal, Eric Löhrer, Cyril Atef, and DJ Shalom.
In 1992, Julien Lourau won the first soloist prize in La Défense and went on to set up his Groove Gang.[1]
In 1999, he experimented with electronic music for his album Gambit which attracted a following from young French people and led to a number of successful concerts. He won that year's jazz trophy at the "Victoires de la Musique" awards.[2] He returned to a more traditional jazz in 2002 with the album The rise, regarded as his most mature album.[3] 2007 saw the release of Julien Lourau vs Rumbabierta which combines Lourau's avant-garde jazz with Afro-Cuban sounds.
His composition includes forms absorbed from Latin, African, Caribbean and European folk music.[4]
Discography
- Julien Lourau Groove Gang (Label Bleu, 1995)
- Olympic Gramofon (Pee Wee, 1996,[5] re-edited in 2003 by Label Bleu)
- City Boom Boom (WEA, 1998)
- Gambit (2000)
- The Rise (Label Bleu, 2002)
- Fire (Label Bleu, 2005)
- Forget (Label Bleu, 2005)
- Julien Lourau vs Rumbabierta (Label Bleu, 2007)
- Saigon Quartet (Naïve Records, 2009)
References
- ↑ "Julien Lourau Biography". Label Bleu.
- ↑ Julien Lourau - From Groove To Trip Hop, RFI Music, Paris, 1999-11-24. Retrieved 2010-06-03
- ↑ Jacques Denis, "Julien Lourau: un jazzman, un vrai, impur", Jazzman n° 138, September 2007, pp. 16–21 (French)
- ↑ Kevin Le Gendre, Julien Lourau Saigon Quartet Review, BBC, 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2010-06-03
- ↑ "Olympic Gramofon". Label Bleu. Retrieved 17 November 2014.
External links
|