Brazil Quatuor Ebène
Album info
Album-Release:
2014
HRA-Release:
22.04.2014
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
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- 1 Lavilliers: O'gringo 07:32
- 2 Valle, M / Valle, P: So Nice 04:25
- 3 Wonder / Greene: I Can't Help It 04:20
- 4 Shorter: Ana Maria 06:10
- 5 Sting: Fragile 04:02
- 6 Lavilliers: Guitar Song 04:30
- 7 Jobim: Àguas De Marcos 03:39
- 8 Pasquale: Bebê 03:43
- 9 Tomlinson: The Ice Hotel 05:35
- 10 Lavilliers: Salomé 04:32
- 11 Piazzolla: Libertango 06:40
- 12 Chaplin: Smile 04:16
- 13 Barroso: Brazil 07:19
Info for Brazil
The New York Times has described the Ebènes as “a string quartet that can easily morph into a jazz band”, and it’s true that the innovative young ensemble is as riveting in Ravel (2009 Gramophone Recording of the Year) as in sophisticated arrangements of pop and film music.
They continue to surprise with a new album inspired by the irresistible rhythms of Brazil. But the Ebène Quartet don’t stop at Jobim, the father of bossa nova; they found echoes of bossa and samba where you would least expect them — resulting in their own arrangements of the Michael Jackson hit I Can’t Help It and Sting’s Fragile, among others. “We are always fascinated by the links between apparently unconnected pieces of music as we explore different aesthetic worlds,” cellist Raphaël Merlin explains.
To that end, the intrepid French foursome invited American jazz chanteuse Stacey Kent to lend her light yet soulful vocals to the album — “a dazzling woman with a radiant voice and a great lover of Brazilian music, who welcomed us into her world,” enthuses violist Mathieu Herzog. She is joined by the iconic French singer Bernard Lavilliers, himself an adventurer “whose name is synonymous with the rhythms and scents of Latin culture”.
Even with songs in English, French and Portuguese — and a Brazilian choir and percussionists joining the fray — the Ebènes’ impassioned, nuanced playing comes to the fore in moments for the quartet alone: a detour to Argentina with Piazzolla’s Libertango and a joyous rendition of the theme from Terry Gilliam’s celebrated film Brazil.
“When someone mentions quartets and chamber music, this isn’t normally what comes to mind,” says Lavilliers. “These four are anything but fixed in their ways, and they’re completely mad about Latin music — and other kinds of music as well.”
Pierre Colombet, violin
Gabriel Le Magadure, violin
Mathieu Herzog, viola
Raphaël Merlin, cello
Stacey Kent, voice
Bernard Lavilliers, voice
Marcos Valle, voice
Jim Tomlinson, soprano & tenor saxophone
Mino Cinelu, triangle, udu, percussion
Richard Hery, drums
Philippe Faurie, guitar
Stéphane Logerot, bass
Rémi Rière, guitar
Brazil Choir
Brazil String Orchestra
No biography found.
Booklet for Brazil