François Carrier featuring Michel Lambert, Paul Bley and Gary Peacock - Travelling Lights (2004)

  • 26 Dec, 09:56
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Artist:
Title: Travelling Lights
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: Justin Time Records Inc.
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:05:30
Total Size: 344 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Americas (07:42)
2. Asia (07:27)
3. Oceania (11:16)
4. Antarctica (06:53)
5. Europe (14:17)
6. Africa (07:16)
7. Sea (02:15)
8. Island (07:59)

Personnel:

François Carrier : alto and soprano sax
Michel Lambert : drums
Paul Bley : piano
Gary Peacock : acoustic bass

b. 5 June 1961, Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada. Carrier began his career as a professional jazz musician, playing alto saxophone in Vancouver in 1979. He soon attracted attention from fellow musicians and a growing audience through his often audacious approach to his music. Based since 1982 in Montreal, he has shown himself to be a fluid and inventive performer of improvised music, especially since the formation in 1990 of his trio, in which he was joined by bass player Pierre Coté and drummer Michel Lambert. Following the release of Intuition, which was nominated as Jazz Album Of The Year at the 1998 Gala de l’ADISQ (Québec’s Music Awards show), Carrier’s trio toured Europe, playing at the Montreux Jazz Festival. Also in 1998, Carrier founded Nouvel Ensemble De Musique Improvisée (NoEMI), a gathering of like-minded free players, among whom have been Dewey Redman and Sonny Greenwich.

Early in 2002, Carrier spent some months composing new works in Rome, having won an award by the Conseil des Arts et des Lettres du Québec. More tours of Canada and some European countries followed, as did more acclaimed albums. Over the years, in concert and sometimes on record, Carrier’s trio has been augmented by guest pianists who have included Steve Amirault, who appeared on Carrier’s Juno Award-winning Compassion (2000), Paul Bley and Gary Peacock, heard on Traveling Lights (2004), Uri Caine, on All’Alba (2003), Jason Moran and Bobo Stenson. Among other musicians with whom he has worked are Mat Maneri, Uwe Neumann and Gary Peacock.

Carrier’s sound is tough and he attacks his music with verve and unpredictability, demanding, and successfully receiving from audiences, attention to and understanding of the swiftly changing moods he explores.