Ezéchiel Pailhès - Boyd London

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  • čas přidán 5. 04. 2017
  • Beautiful piano melodies, ballads drawing their inspiration from jazz, classical music and cinematic
    imagery, hummed choruses, a mood at the crossroad of nostalgia and reverie, instruments with
    uncanny timbre and charm, chiseled percussions, added to a subtle electronic production, this is the
    recipe for Tout Va Bien, the second solo album by French composer Ezechiel Pailhès.
    All this is reflected in the opening track, River Day, which begins with “prepared piano” sounds (a
    technique mastered by Ezechiel, which consists in placing different objects on the strings of the piano,
    to create singular percussive notes). This deliberately mysterious and poetic introduction, supported
    by light electronic effects, is soon combined with a light beat, organ chords and vocalisations by the
    artist, which gradually transform the track into a ritornello, with both nostalgic and lighthearted tones.
    As the artist states it: “We could describe this type of emotion as a kind of endearing nostalgia, close
    to saudade,” i.e. the Portuguese term expressing the idea of a light melancholy stripped of its sickly
    aspect, or a “haunted craving” as the singer and composer Pierre Barouh nicely put it. “This feeling
    comes naturally to me when I write. Generally, in my music, I seek a form of soothing, of eternity even,
    (without meaning to sound pretentious). This is something I encounter in classical music, which is
    what I listen to most.”
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    Even if he defines himself as a “jolly fellow” (which is confirmed by the music and reputation of his
    electro-pop duo Nôze), when chatting to him, he comes across as quite gentle and stellar, just like this
    collection of eleven tracks that he composed “in autarky”, entirely alone, in his Montreuil home studio.
    Following the footpath of Divine, his first solo release from 2013, this album is however more intimate,
    marking Pailhès' taste for finely crafted moods and drifts. Songs like Tout Va Bien, but also Éternel Été
    and Promesse, whose lines have been borrowed from Shakespeare's sonnets, seem to shift between
    carelessness, bliss, bitterness and anxiety.
    “Why didst thou promise such a beauteous day
    And make me travel forth without my cloak,
    To let base clouds o'ertake me in my way,
    Hiding they bravery in their rotten smoke?”
    (Taken from William Shakespeare's Sonnets that inspired Promesse)
    As for titles such as Octobre, Boyd London or Le Fou Du Phare, they illustrate Ezechiel’s gift for
    composing instrumental ballads, with equally versatile emotions though drawing from cinema,
    supported by whispered or sung vocalisations. Ezechiel explains: “No word can quite describe this
    type of singing, it's a kind of ritornello, these are songs without lyrics, which is all down to the fact that I
    always think of my melodies as songs. The absence of words is not a form of laziness. My songs
    simply say enough for people to imagine their own story. It is more about suggesting or evoking a
    feeling, an emotion. "
    Even though he composed on the piano, in this album Ezechiel plays and toys with numerous other
    instruments, such as the Clavietta (a type of Melodica), a Moog Little Phatty synth, an analog Korg
    Lambda organ, rare virtual instruments, and a whole array of exotic percussions, gleaned along his
    tours. He insists, however, on the sculptural dimension of his compositional work. For him, it is about
    “revealing or masking the sound of the original melody” through various processes, including
    percussive ones, whether using a prepared piano (which he even calls "transformist”) or several digital
    cuts and superimpositions enabling him to generate what he calls “sound illusions”, through unusual
    associations between the timbres of various instruments.
    Even if parallels can be drawn with the work of other composers, such as Moondog's piano melodies,
    Matthew Herbert's sonorous and rhythmic tinkering and techno 'fringe', or even the graceful fantasy of
    Nino Rota, the music of Ezechiel definitely sounds like no other. His songs conveying delicate
    emotions, his obvious melodic mastery, draw from classical influences. His instrumental ease acquired
    from jazz, his conciseness and sounds processing skills derived from electro, this all makes him one of
    the most singular and endearing personalities in today's musical scene.
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