L'Orkestre des Pas Perdus - Projet 9

Projet 9
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Album Details: Projet 9

Release Date:01/01/2007
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Track List: Projet 9

  1. Belle Affaire
  2. Justice Borgne
  3. Pièce à Conviction
  4. Chameau #5
  5. Deus Ex Machina
  6. Gastro Funk
  1. Art Piège
  2. Panorama
  3. Dos d'Âne
  4. Mécanique Populaire
  5. Couvre-Feu

Pro Reviews: Projet 9

  • All Music Guide

    Montreal bandleader, composer, and trombone madman Claude StJean's highspirited brass band L'Orkestre des Pas Perdus are usually a compact sextet featuring StJean's 'bone along with two saxophones, trumpet, and a tight rhythm section of sousaphone and drums (with some of the multiinstrumental bandmembers adding additional colors with flute, piccolo, clarinet, flügelhorn, and more). But as the title of 2007's Projet 9 suggests, the group has expanded to a nonet here, with four instead of two saxophonists (adding Marc Villiard on alto as well as tenor man and flutist Pierre Labbé from StJean's other band, Les Projectionnistes) and Bruno BlouinRobert on cor Français. The rest of the sextet drummer Rémi Leclerc, soprano saxophonist/clarinetist JeanDenis Levasseur, saxophonist Roberto Murray (here featured exclusively on baritone), sousaphonist Jean Sabourin, trumpeter Maxime StPierre, and StJean remains intact, a finely honed unit with over a decade's worth of experience pumping out the ...bandleader's highenergy tunes, as heard on OPP classic CDs like 2004's Mondo Cuivro and 1998's Maison Douce Maison. StJean has always been an ingenious writer for this ensemble, employing tight multilayered riffing and counterpoint over those insistent, danceable rhythms, and often making OPP sound bigger than they really are. Well, here OPP are bigger, so if the sextet sounded like a nonet, the nonet seems more like a 12tet, but just as sharp and focused as ever. Right out of the gate on the opening "La Belle Affaire," OPP swing like crazy, brass and reed accents crisp and punchy behind multiple soloists rising together out of the mix in fine New Orleans classic jazz fashion, but with the type of internationalist flair one has come to expect from OPP, untethered to a narrowly defined style or specific geographical location. A more complicated offering, "Justine Borgne" begins with a brief drummerless intro for flute, horn, and reeds leading into a series of interludes with sometimes knotty rhythms and surprising compositional twists and turns, steadily rising in energy and tightening up until an abrupt finish. Blowing vehicle "Pièce à Conviction" rolls forward in 7/8 with a circular sax ensemble line staking out the middle territory between Leclerc and Sabourin's funkedup rhythm work and brief hot solos from StPierre, Villiard, and Levasseur. Another highlight, "Deus Ex Machina" features the band in hyper swing mode with bright layers of reed and brass harmonies swirling through the mix. "Gastro Funk" is indeed the hottest funkster here, with the band impossibly punchy and inthepocket, hitting hard but with consummate style underneath StJean's growling trombone and Labbé's tenor skronk and squeals. Midtempo bluesy jazzer "Art Piège" features a bridge suggesting of all people Philip Glass (are OPP moving toward postminimalism?), while "Panorama" sandwiches its tight ensembles, impossibly infectious groove, and crazed soloing between an opening and closing Zappaesque theme. Despite the nearly dizzying complexity of "Dos d'Âne," the tune's forward momentum still nearly sweeps the listener away, while the closing "CouvreFeu" brings the zaniness of a Raymond Scott cartoon soundtrack to a literal barnyard of sounds. Like other OPP CDs, the listener should expect concision soloists given 16 bars, say, to state their case and then fall back into the ensemble to navigate StJean's compositional twists and turns and accent the next soloist who steps into the spotlight. And the 11 tracks here all pack their punches into running times in the threeandahalf to fourandahalfminute range. In other words, OPP are about the farthest thing imaginable from "free jazz," collective improvisation, or other likeminded approaches to musical expression in the avantgarde world. Yet they continue to be highly idiosyncratic and don't fit in anybody else's box, certainly compared to conventional postbop and even the most adventurous of modern creative jazz groups. Claude StJean and his oneofakind OPP want to stun and surprise you with their skill and inventiveness here writ large with their most spectacular lineup yet. But they mainly want you to have fun, and on Projet 9 they most certainly do not disappoint. - Dave Lynch, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

L'Orkestre des Pas Perdus

This six-piece Montreal brass band (whose name roughly translates as "Lost Steps Orchestra") is dedicated to having a great time without compromising any of its formidable musicianship along the way. Formed by trombonist and composer Claude St.-Jean in 1993, the band also includes saxophones and trumpet, as well as a rhythm section comprised of drums and -- no, not bass... Read more