Claude Bolling (born 10 April 1930), is a renowned French
jazz pianist, composer, arranger, and occasional actor.
He was born in Cannes, studied at the Nice Conservatory,
then in Paris. A child prodigy, by age 14 he was playing jazz piano
professionally, with Lionel Hampton, Roy Eldridge, and Kenny Clarke.
His primary jazz influence was Duke
Ellington. The small band he assembled in 1945 drew inspiration from old time
New Orleans jazz legends like Jelly Roll Morton, King Oliver, Louis Armstrong,
and Sidney Bechet as well as the groups led by Ellington sidemen Johnny Hodges,
Rex Stewart, Barney Bigard, and Cootie Williams. This blend of interests would
soon place him on common ground with his almost exact contemporary, Britain's
premier trad jazz bandleader, Chris Barber.
In 1948 Bolling accompanied legendary blues vocalist Bertha
Chippie Hill and subsequently gigged with trumpeters Roy Eldridge and Cat
Anderson, cornetist Rex Stewart, saxophonist Paul Gonsalves, and vibraphonist
Lionel Hampton. He formed and began leading his own orchestra in 1955,
eventually naming it the Show Bizz Band.
Claude with the Duke |
During the 1960s Bolling demonstrated a keen business sense
by supplementing his jazz oriented recording and band leading activities with
hectic and, one hopes, lucrative service as creator, producer, and manager of
Les Parisiennes, a female pop vocal quartet who specialized in rapid-fire
novelty numbers, synchronized movement, and brightly patterned mod-a-go-go
outfits.
He also composed many incidental and theme music for mainly French
films and television (including "Borsalino," "Netchaiev Est de
Retour," and "Les Brigandes du Tigre"), while expanding his knowledge
and interpretive range to include early modern jazz pianists like Erroll
Garner, Thelonious Monk, Oscar Peterson, George Shearing, and Horace Silver in
addition to swing and stride favourites Fats Waller, Count Basie, and Willie
"The Lion" Smith.
Influenced by the attempts to mix jazz and classical music
by George Gershwin, Dave Brubeck, and the Jacques Loussier Trio, he composed
his Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano in 1975 and recorded it with Jean-Pierre
Rampal. It was wildly successful, remaining on Billboard’s Classical Top 40 for
over 10 years. Bolling followed this with a string of similar crossover albums
featuring one or two solo instruments with his own jazz piano trio, including
the Guitar Concerto, (with Alexandre Lagoya); a Violin Suite, (with Pinchas
Zuckerman); the Picnic Suite for flute and guitar, (with Rampal and Lagoya);
the Toot Suite for trumpet, (with Maurice André); a Cello Suite, (with Yo-Yo
Ma); and a second Flute Suite, (again with Rampal), as well as a Suite for
Chamber Orchestra and a Sonata for Two Pianos, (with Emanuel Ax).
Here's Rag Polka from above album
...
Since then, he has written a series of chamber works that
while drawing somewhat on his background in jazz, are composed more within the
mainstream classical tradition. Many of these works were recorded on the album
Enchanting Versailles, including La Princesse, a trio for flute, cello, and
harp; a Guitar Sonata, the Dans Le Bois woodwind trio; and Le Papillon for alto
saxophone and piano. In addition, Bolling has written the scores for over 100
films, including Neil Simon’s comedy hit California Suite, which starred Alan
Alda, Jane Fonda, and Bill Cosby.
Now in his eighties, Bolling continues to compose, record,
and perform. He remains one of the most popular French musicians. (Info edited
various mainly All Music)
1 comment:
For “Bolling's Greatest Hits” go here:
http://www65.zippyshare.com/v/mKTocC7c/file.html
01. Barroque And Blue (5:19)
02. Sentimentale (7:46)
03. Ragtime (5:18)
04. Baroque In Rhythm (4:26)
05. Africaine (4:28)
06. Jazzy (5:44)
07. Mystique (7:52)
08. Canon (3:37)
09. Tendre (6:04)
10. Amoureuse (7:13)
11. Rag-Polka (3:26)
12. Black Folks (4:21)
For “Jean-Pierre Rampal & Claude Bolling - Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano trio” go here:
http://www75.zippyshare.com/v/OJQMrv1u/file.html
Jean-Pierre Rampal — flaute, flauta baixo em "Versatile"
Claude Bolling — piano
Max Hédiguer — baixo
Marcel Sabiani — percussão
01 - Baroque And Blue
02 - Sentimentale
03 - Javanaise
04 - Fugace
05 - Irlandaise
06 - Versatile (with Bass Flute)
07 – Veloce
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