Jean-François Quiévreux (25 July 1926 – 5 February 2012), better known as Jef Gilson, was a French clarinetist, pianist, arranger, vocalist, composer and big band leader who played in a straight-ahead hard bop style and also made forays into Afro-jazz and free jazz.
Gilson was born Jean-François Quiévreux in the Alsatian town of Guebwiller, in northeastern France. When Jean-François was 11, his father, a mining engineer and music enthusiast, uprooted the family to Paris after a work-related injury forced him to transfer into an office job. As a youth he claimed to have switched from playing piano to clarinet to fool his parents into thinking he was studying classical music and not jazz. Yet as a teenager living in the severe backdrop of Nazi-occupied France, Jean-François was already organizing secret jazz gigs in Paris with celebrated musician Claude Luter and trumpeter/novelist Boris Vian.
fter the war, Gilson threw himself back into mastering the piano. As an admirer of both Canadian cool jazz pioneer Gil Evans and bebop arranger Walter “Gil” Fuller, he took on the moniker of Gilson—“Gil’s son.” Heavily influenced by the Dizzy Gillespie Big Band, the young maestro was entranced by the forward-thinking sounds of bebop. It was a bold direction to take, as French jazz audiences were still feeling the more traditional New Orleans style. But Gilson, setting the tone for his entire career, opted to follow his own sonic interests.
For this and other reasons, major success never quite crystallized for Gilson. By the 1950s, he’d started to lay down his compositions on wax but was also taking shifts in record stores and freelance jobs as a sound engineer to pay the bills. Gilson served behind the boards at Charles Delaunay’s Vogue label from its foundation in the early 1950s and for a period even ran his own record shop, Kiosque d’Orphée, on the rue des Beaux-Arts. In the back room, the musician built his own studio, recording French musicians like his old friend Vian and a young American named Lloyd Miller, who’s hailed these days for his research on Persian and Afghan music.
Gilson enjoyed a diamond reputation among local jazzmen. His collaboration list reads like the record collection of any serious French jazz music collector: Henri-Claude Fantapié, Jean-Louis Chautemps, Eddy Louiss, Michel Portal, Jean-Luc Ponty, Bernard Lubat, Mino Cinelu, Henri Texier, Alby Cullaz, Jacques Di Donato, François Jeanneau, and others.
His role as a key touching point for visiting American musicians and expatriates in Paris also saw him mix with legends like Bud Powell, Woody Shaw, Bill Coleman, Byard Lancaster, Nathan Davis, Philly Joe Jones, Ted Curson, Hal Singer, Butch Morris, Wayne Shorter, Ornette Coleman, Dizzy Gillespie, and John Coltrane. A career highlight came at the Festival d’Antibes, Juan Les Pins in 1965 when Gilson opened for Coltrane.
Gilson took an interest in the early development of free jazz. His recordings, on which early compositions with tempo changes (such as Enfin!), bitonal layers and chromatic topics are included, first appeared on a mini label. Some of the harmonic function has been overridden in his compositions since 1964, without, being exclusively free jazz oriented (New Call from France, 1966). Commercial success did not materialize. In addition, in 1965 he joined the vocal sextet Les Double Six, first as and a member, later as its musical director, which he left in 1968 to teach music in Madagascar.
In 1971 he returned and concentrated first on ethno jazz and later "total improvisation". In 1973 he founded his label, Palm, on which are especially the recordings with his orchestra Europamerica, and with Butch Morris. For this more arranged record, which started reflecting his achievements of free jazz, he was awarded the 1978 Prix Boris Vian. He also established a jazz school in Paris.
In the 1980’s he ceased to perform while continuing to teach and became more important for helping the careers of other younger musicians than for his own playing. Up to his final days he lived withdrawn in Ardèche. Gilson lived only to see the first shots of a surge of interest in his work before passing away on February 5, 2012.
(Edited from article by Dean Van Nguyen @ Bandcamp Daily, New Grove Dictonary of Jazz & Wikipedia)
3 comments:
For both albums below go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/hyphS
Jef Gilson – Self Titled (2011 Jazzman) (@192)
1. Up to the Light 01:35
2. Accueil 01:14
3. Valse Pour Helene 02:30
4. Blue Bizz 06:59
5. Valse a Quatre Temps 03:05
6. Agnus Dei 02:55
7. Modalite Pour Mimi 03:49
8. Three, Four, One 03:53
9. Chakan 02:26
10. Jazz a la Quarte 03:28
11. Un Pas, Deux Pas, Cent Pas 02:30
12. Valerie's Waltz 03:38
13. Suite Pour San Remo: Ouverture 04:25
14. Strings For One 05:40
15. Suite Pour San Remo: Adriano 04:11
16. Espagnolade 06:33
17. Chant Inca 04:11
18. Hommage a Rakotozafy 04:49
19. The Creator has a Masterplan 11:28
This album contains 19 songs spanning decades of his recording career.
High points include the awesome modal masterpiece Modalite Pour Mimi; Chakan and Agnus Dei which feature a cathedral choir, and lesser-known private recordings such as Valerie’s Waltz and Valse a Quatre Temps. We include field recordings made on his trip to Madagascar, including a percussive version of the Lloyd Miller favourite Chant Inca and an unforgettable version of Pharoah Sanders’ cult classic ‘The Creator has a Masterplan’.
Jef Gilson – Archives (2013 Jazzman) (@192)
1. Bis Indicatif 00:44
2. Chant Inca (Alternative Version) 05:42
3. Equateur 03:45
4. Lamento 04:46
5. Choro in Blue 02:47
6. Three Four One (piano solo) 01:56
7. Ballet Lycra 1 03:41
8. Ablution 03:16
9. Anamorphose 04:50
10. Three Four One 01:41
11. Chant Inca (Alt 2) 02:35
12. Java Pour Raspail 04:11
13. Agnus Dei (Instrumental) 02:26
14. Requiem Pour Django 07:31
15. Java 03:03
16. Remember 04:30
17. Le Grand Bidou 04:17
18. La Cigale Et La Fourmi (Instrumental) 01:46
19. Colchique Dans Les Pres 06:44
This album contains early experiments in Oriental and Ethnic Jazz with Lloyd Miller, unissued alternate takes of Gilson’s classic repertoire, long-lost live performances from 1960s European jazz festivals and rehearsals and jam sessions that developed into a lifelong creative obsession.
Despite the limitations afforded by mastering some of these recordings from anonymous reels of twisted, buckled tape and scratched, dusty old acetate discs, it is with hope that the music contained herein affords a fascinating and otherwise impenetrable insight into the workings of one of the great unsung creative forces of European jazz.
For “Jef Gilson et Malagasy (4CDset 2014 Jazzman) (@192)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/eFPrn
CD1
1. A Tana
2. Avaradoha
3. Chant Inca
4. Sodina
5. The Creator Has a Master-Plan
6. Malagasy
CD2
7. Newport Bounce
8. Salegy Jef
9. Solo Frank
10. Buddah's Vision
11. Veloma Lava
12. Valiha Del
13. Requiem Pour Django
14. Dizzy 48
15. 1973
CD3 : Madagascar Now : Maintenant ‘Zao
16. Valiha Ny Dada
17. Katramo
18. Hommage a Rakotozafy
19. Amore Ny Canal
20. Del-Light
21. O Ambalavoa
22. Rotaka (Fais Peter)
CD4 : Les touches noires
23. Colchiques Dans Les Pres
24. Unknown 1
25. Unknown 2
26. Unknown 3
27. Chant Inca (Live)
28. Dizzy 48 (Live)
29. Prelude En Sol Mineur
30. Les Touches Noires
31. Unknown 4
Early experiments in Ethno Jazz created as a direct result of Jef Gilson’s expedition to Madagascar in 1969. Three CDs of super rare Malagasy jazz restored and available again for the first time in 40 years. The last Cd is from two LPs of unheard and previously unissued Afro-Spiritual jazz.
Many thanks,one master
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