Jean-Michel Defaye (born 18 September 1932) is a French pianist, composer,[1] arranger and conductor known for his collaboration with French poet and singer-songwriter Léo Ferré.
He was born in Saint-Mandé, Val-de-Marne near Paris, on 18 September 1932. Aged ten he entered the Paris Conservatoire and completed his musical training in theory, piano and composition, taking in Nadia Boulanger's accompaniment class. In 1952 he won the Premier Second Grand Prix de Rome and the following year he won second prize in composition for the Belgian Queen Elisabeth competition.[citation needed]
As a composer he wrote mostly for brass and especially trombone.
As an arranger, he worked during ten years with Léo Ferré. He is mostly known by general public in France today for this body of work. At piano in the Olympia Big Band.
Classical works
edit- Suite Marine
- Morceau de Concours I (SG 1–2)
- Morceau de Concours II (SG 3–4)
- Morceau de Concours III (SG 5)
- Deux Danses, for trombone and piano (1954)
- Quatre pièces, for trombones quartet (1954)
- Sonatine (1956)[2]
- Mouvement, for trombone and piano (1972)
- Fluctuations, for solo trombone, 6 trombones and 2 percussions (1987)
- À la manière de Bach, for trombone and piano (1990)
- Suite entomologique, for trombone and piano (1992)
- Œuvre de concours I, for trombone and piano (1993)
- Œuvre de concours II, for trombone and piano (1993)
- Œuvre de concours III, for trombone and piano (1993)
- À la manière de Schumann, for trombone and piano (2000)
- À la manière de Debussy, for trombone and piano (2001)
- À la manière de Vivaldi, for trombone and piano (2002)
- À la manière de Stravinsky, for trombone and piano (2005)
- À la manière de Brahms, for trombone and piano (2011)
- Musique à Curitiba, for trombone solo and 16 trombones (????)
Discography
editwith Léo Ferré
edit- 1957: Les Fleurs du mal
- 1960: Paname
- 1961: Les Chansons d'Aragon
- 1961: Récital à l'Alhambra (live)
- 1962: La Langue française
- 1964: Ferré 64
- 1964: Verlaine et Rimbaud
- 1965: Ni Dieu ni maître (EP)
- 1966: Léo Ferré 1916-19...
- 1967: Cette chanson (La Marseillaise)
- 1967: Léo Ferré chante Baudelaire
- 1969: L'Été 68
- 1969: Les Douze Premières Chansons de Léo Ferré
- 1970: Amour Anarchie
- 1972: La Solitudine
- 2003: Les Chansons interdites... et autres (recorded in 1961)
References
edit- ^ Turnevicius, Leonard (28 October 2003). "Bellows and Brass blow hot and cold at Mac". The Spectator. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 22 February 2011.
- ^ Hinson, Maurice; Roberts, Wesley (2006). The Piano in Chamber Ensemble: an Annotated Guide. Indiana University Press. p. 340. ISBN 978-0-253-34696-4. Retrieved 15 February 2011.