Louis Sclavis
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Louis Sclavis (b. Lyon, France, February 2, 1953) is a French jazz musician. He performs on clarinet, bass clarinet, and soprano saxophone in a variety of contexts, including jazz and free jazz. His music shows great creativity and a lively sense of humor.
Sclavis began his musical education at the conservatoire de Lyon at age 9, where he studied clarinet. He began performing with the Lyon Workshop, where he met Michel Portal and Bernard Lubat. He then joined the Brotherhood of Breath of Chris McGregor, and later the Henri Texier quartet.
He began his work as a leader in 1987, with his first album Chine. The track Duguesclin has actually been a hit in France, due to its lively, middle-age inspiration. In 1995, he created, along with Henri Texier and Aldo Romano, a trio named the African trio which achieved considerable success, even outside of the French jazz community.
He frequently performs with the cellist Ernst Reijseger and was one of the first to combine jazz with French folk music, working most prominently with the hurdy-gurdy player Valentin Clastrier.
[edit] Discography
- Chine (Label Bleu, 1987)
- Chamber Music (Label Bleu, 1990)
- Ellington on the air (Label Bleu, 1991)
- Acoustic Quartet (ECM, 1994)
- Carnets de Route (Label Bleu, 1995)
- Ceux qui veillent la nuit (Label Bleu, 1996)
- Les violences de Rameau (ECM, 1996)
- Suite africaine (Label Bleu , 1999)
- L'affrontement des prétendants (ECM, 2001)
- Napoli's Walls (ECM, 2003)
- African Flashback (Label Bleu, 2005)
- L'imparfait des Langues (ECM, 2007)