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Dance Videos
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Auvergne-Diffusion and MP3 Sites
I own and HIGHLY recommend all of the following recordings available either as CDs from auvergne-diffusion.fr, or as MP3 downloads from iTunes
or eMusic.
Auvergne-diffusion.com sells complete CDs in cases. They accept credit cards and can ship to the US and Canada (although you can't specify the US in the shopping cart, and
will have to contact them with a credit card number outside the website). To make a purchase, email them at vpc@auvergnediffusion.com.
The links in the
table below labeled "auv-diff" will take you to pages on the auvergne-diffusion site. Links labeled "iTunes" or "eMusic" take you to those sites, respectively.
Artist(s)/Group | Recording | Comments |
Chabenat, Gilles and Patrick Bouffard |
Tour à Tour (auv-diff)
(iTunes)
(eMusic) |
This is Patrick's and Gilles' first CD together. The recording is almost
identical to their recent concert appearances (without
the audience noise). I am totally floored by this recording, just as I
was by hearing them perform together. These two stellar vielle masters,
who have done so much individually to revive and enlarge French folk music in
the last 20 years, are utterly amazing as a duo -- it's often hard to
believe, in their concerts or listening to the recording (which contains no
overdubbing) that the incredible wall of music is coming out of two people and
their vielles. This is not a couple of hot gurdy players sitting down and
jamming...this music is arranged, and layered, and interleaved, by two people
for whom the word "genius" is not an exaggeration. The tunes are mostly old
standards in French folk, but you'd hardly know it, as they are lovingly
reconstructed
as fine performance
pieces. Some of it is so beautiful it puts tears in my eyes. A masterpiece.
|
Champion, Eric |
Eric Champion (auv-diff)
(iTunes)
(eMusic) |
This is a 2002 recording by a really excellent diatonic player
-- one of the founders of Les Brayauds camp -- who has been on the French folk
scene
since the mid 1970s. It is almost entirely solo playing, with a bit of clarinet
(Sonia Rogowski) and singing (Didier Champion). It is clear
that Eric could hold down a dance all by himself for hours, as everything is
very lively and danceable, and at times you are surprised that you're listening
to only one musician. All of the tunes are
interesting, and many were collected by him and other musician friends in the
Puy de Dome region of Auvergne (where he lives and grew up surrounded by local
music). Other tunes on the recording include original compositions of Eric's, a
couple of very nice local songs, and some classic Auvergne dance tunes. Eric's
playing style is somewhere between firmly traditional and creative. His chording
is pretty traditional, but his extensive use of rhythm on both hands is
innovative and gives the music a lot of drive. I'd recommend this recording to
all enthusiasts of centre France music, but especially the diatonic players. |
Fai Petar |
Fai Petar (iTunes)
(eMusic)
|
This is a terrific recording from a delightful band. Freddie Dussaillant
was my box
teacher at Les Brayauds, and I developed tremendous
respect for his playing (all three members teach at Brayauds). They're all
very fine players (Freddie on diatonic, Basile Bremaud on fiddle and Sonia Rogowski on
clarinet), and in Freddie and Basile's case, fine writers of tunes (over half
the tunes on the CD are originals by one or the other, and they're excellent). But it's also the sweetness and joy and danceability in the music.
You could dance to these people all night (and they'd play all
night, too), and feel yourself light on your feet and smiling at everyone.
|
Chavannée, La |
Bateau Doré
(iTunes)
(eMusic)
|
This 1998 recording by one of the truly great bands of the French Trad movement is one of their finest.
Their lineup still reads like a who's who of central France music -- Patrick Bouffard and Maxou Heintzen
on hurdy-gurdy, Eric Elsener and Manu Paris on flutes and pipes, the wonderfully cheerful box playing of
Frederic Paris and the
singing of his wife Eveline...plus two fiddlers. The music
goes from sweet to dark and back again like clouds passing in front of the sun...but never too dark.
|
Chavannée, La |
Rage de Danse
(iTunes)
(eMusic)
|
This is the definitive French trad band, with at least 3 or 4 of the key players in the French folk community.
And their sound is great -- two hurdy-gurdies, two bagpipes, two fiddles, a singer, one (or sometimes 2)
diatonic(s). All of the tunes are composed by the band members, and include several of the
classic tunes of the genre, including the original Adele Blanc Sec and Callipyge. (see more
early La Chavannee recordings on the out-of-print/Mitch page)
|
Lazarevich, Francois with Dominique Paris, Anne-Lise Foy et al |
Danses des Bergers, Danses des Loups
(Amazon [cd or mp3])
(auv-diff) |
If your French dance music just doesn't sound right without
some hardcore vielle and bagpipe snarling, this CD (along with Carré de Deux)
is
for you. Piper François Lazarevitch has pulled together four other top-notch
musicians and a bunch of excellent (and dark) traditional tunes, mostly
unfamiliar to me, many of them with wolf themes to their names. He has also
compiled a thick pile of liner notes -- in French and English -- describing the
tunes, the origins of the bourrée, some good wolf and bagpipe
legends, and other interesting academia. But there's nothing academic about the
recording...it's a great listen from start to finish, arranged interestingly,
tastefully and very traditionally, full of snarl and bite (and suitable
foot-stomping from the pipers). One of my favorites. |
Musiqu'a Deux |
En Attendant L'Orage
(eMusic) |
Myriam and Jean-Yves Lameyre perform as a duo by the stage name of Musiqu'a Deux,
and what a talented pair! She's an especially nice-sounding box player, but also plays pipes and guitar and sings.
He plays fiddle, pipes, hurdy-gurdy and a bit of box also. Together they're a two person trad orchestra.
The CD
is full of interesting traditional tunes and songs, some familiar, some not. Their duo vocal with hurdy-gurdy
and pipes on the darkly atmospheric La Rose Blanche is worth the price of the recording by itself. I took
a chance when I first bought this recording, and boy was I glad I did.
|
Bouffard, Patrick |
Musiques Pour Vielle à Roue
(iTunes)
|
This is probably my favorite solo recording by any hurdy-gurdy player, partly
because Patrick is my favorite player of the instrument, and partly because
there are so many great tunes, many of them his originals. This was his first
album, back in the early 90's, and his playing was as phenomenal then as it
is now. Thanks to the sparse production, you really get to hear everything
he's doing.
On several tracks he is the only musician, on many others there is only a
second hurdy-gurdy player. A classic.
|
Trio Patrick Bouffard |
En Bal
(eMusic)
(iTunes)
|
This CD features the trio playing for dancers (you don't generally
see trad French concerts per se in central France -- a concert is a dance, and a dance is a concert).
Except for the applause and cheering and sound of dancers' feet, not very different from what's on
Revenant de Paris and Rabaterie. It takes a heck of a band to sound identical to their studio recordings
when playing live.
|
Trio Patrick Bouffard |
Revenant de Paris
(auv-diff)
(iTunes) |
Trio Patrick Bouffard (really a quartet) is one of the great trad dance bands of
central France, in no small part because of Patrick himself. Patrick is a presence, with his powerful hands
and intense expression, and the music the group makes is driving. He's also one of the great composers in
the central France tradition. Cyril Roche on box, Benoit Mager on pipes and Anne-Lise Foy on hurdy-gurdy and
vocals
are all excellent musicians, but it's Patrick's hurdy-gurdy playing that is the centerpiece. The tunes
are all good solid choices, both trad and composed by Patrick and others. The band and the recording are
top-notch.
|
Trio Patrick Bouffard |
Rabaterie (auv-diff)
(iTunes) |
If you didn't get enough of Trio Patrick Bouffard
from the Revenant de Paris recording, here's another full CD with more of the
same great stuff -- driving dance tune's, Anne-Lise's pretty singing...and
a very enjoyable 19th century court piece -- La Marie Antoinette, complete
with crumhorns.
|
Paris, Frederic |
Rue de l'Oiseau
(auv-diff)
|
This is one of box player Frederic Paris' two classic accordion recordings from the
1980's, re-released on CD (the other one, Carnet de Bal, is still out of
print). Frederic Paris is probably the most influential diatonic player in
French folk music. He has written many memorable compositions, several of
them represented here, and has been with La Chavannee from the beginning. His
box playing has a cheerfulness and a sweetness that make you suspect that he's
a real nice guy. The tunes are very simply presented, mostly just box and his
clarinet playing, but it's all they need.
|
Blanchard, Jean |
Accordéon Diatonique
(iTunes)
(eMusic)
|
A very nicely done, unproduced, album of box tunes, played very simply and traditionally but with nice
ornamentation. A great bunch of traditional tunes, and highly recommended for the box players.
|
Gentiane |
Musique d'Auvergne
(eMusic)
|
A very nicely polished ensemble of good Auvergne tunes, several of them familiar, with a group of excellent
musicians, notably Jean Blanchard and Bernard Blanc. There's a bit of piano in places, but mostly good
solid French trad. Very enjoyable.
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