Thomas Bloch / Chiron,Marion / Clement,Annelise - Olivier Calmel: Les Improbables [Reissue] | RECORD STORE DAY
RECORD STORE DAY

Thank you for choosing to buy locally from a record store!

You can explore 3 ways to buy:

Find and visit a Local Record Store and get phone number and directions (call first, there is no guarantee which products may be in stock locally)

Purchase now from a local store that sells online or when available from an indie store on RSDMRKT.com

Purchase digitally now from recordstoreday.com (which serves local record stores)

Preorder Now

Store Distance Phone Preorder
Loading...

Find a local store


DISC: 1

1. Calmel: La légende de Kaguya-Hime
2. Calmel: Suite Métamorphique: I. El Camino
3. Calmel: Suite Métamorphique: II. Esperanza
4. Calmel: Suite Métamorphique: III. El Diablo
5. Calmel: Mystic Archipel: I. Chant intérieur
6. Calmel: Mystic Archipel: II. Prélude
7. Calmel: Mystic Archipel: III. Asymmetric Perpetuum Mobile
8. Calmel: Mystic Archipel: IV. Ellipse Boogaloo
9. Calmel: Mystic Archipel: V. Méditation
10. Calmel: Mystic Archipel: VI. Sarcastic Pogo Furioso
11. Calmel: Gravity Ripples
12. Calmel: Joy Forever
13. Calmel: If
14. Calmel: Three Views of a Duet: I. Allegro
15. Calmel: Three Views of a Duet: II. Lento
16. Calmel: Three Views of a Duet: III. Presto
17. Calmel: Manhattan Sonate - Financial District

More Info:

Composer Olivier Calmel has decided to devote his new monograph Les Improbables to the specific field of chamber music. The common thread running through this new recording is the choice of rare instruments with unique sonorities, such as the thirteen-string koto or the glass harmonica, and a mosaic of sound textures rarely used in Western chamber music: the combination of harp, glass harmonica and saxophone, the quartet with accordion or the reed duo. The works recorded on Les Improbables are all inspired by the poetry of John Keats, Victor Hugo, Léopold Sédar Senghor, José-Maria de Heredia and Rudyard Kipling, the visual arts of master glass artist Jeremy Maxwell Wintrebert, and tales such as The Bamboo Chopper. Nourished by a wide range of influences and a rich, poetic language, from the traditional music of the Mediterranean and the Balkans to the cantatas of Bach, from John Adams to Keith Jarrett, Olivier Calmel draws on a genuine fascination for rhythm, an art of counterpoint that reveals a chiselled instrumentation and constantly seeks to shift the lines, in particular by proposing to the performer the use of certain codifications of improvised music in a resolutely innovative style. A compositional aesthetic that is fully in keeping with the tradition of the forms and language of tonal, polyphonic, and percussive music.