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Imbert, Queyras, Blanchard, Troupé - Invisible Stream (2022)
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Raphaël Imbert / Jean-Guihen Queyras / Pierre-François Blanchard / Sonny Troupé
Invisible Stream
2022 - Harmonia Mundi Musique: HMM 902343
https://www.harmoniamundi.com/albums/invisible-stream/
https://www.nine-spirit.com/index.php/les-projets/creations/invisible-stream/
https://www.pierrefrancoisblanchard.com/projets/rapha%C3%ABl-imbert-jean-guihen-queyras-invisible-stream/

* Raphaël Imbert           : soprano saxophone, bass clarinet
* Jean-Guihen Queyras      : cello
* Pierre-François Blanchard: piano
* Sonny Troupé             : drums, ka drum

https://www.raphaelimbert.com/
https://www.jeanguihenqueyras.com/
https://www.pierrefrancoisblanchard.com/
https://www.sonnytroupe.com/

Recorded by Alban Moraud, assisted by Alexandra Evrard,
at Schloss Elmau, Krün, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Bavaria,
Germany, on February, 2022.

Reviews
~~~~~~~

By James Manheim
https://www.allmusic.com/album/invisible-stream-mw0003718048

The "invisible stream," writes saxophonist-composer Raphaël Imbert, "refers to
that 'unseen current' that connects people, artist, improvisers, musicians,
while transcending aesthetic and cultural boundaries." It is a concept general
enough to apply to many recitals, but Imbert and a trio consisting of cellist
Jean-Guihen Queyras, pianist Pierre-François Blanchard, and percussionist Sonny
Troupé realize it here with unusual depth. Imbert and Troupé, who is from
Guadeloupe, both have jazz backgrounds, and Imbert's compositions draw on
jazz. However, the linkages are strengthened by the presence of 19th and 20th
century songs, specifically German, that tie into a nostalgic mood in Imbert's
works. The mood is strongest in the opening Akim's Spirit, a tribute to a
deceased mountain climber that is the only multi-movement work on the
program. It is substantial enough to provide momentum running through music by
composers as diverse as Ornette Coleman and Richard Wagner (who, it must be
said, might not have been crazy to find himself in such surroundings). The
program doesn't have an effect of novelty; rather, it weaves a spell that
deepens as it proceeds, and the whole project offers an engrossing hour of
chamber music that brings the careers of all involved into new territories.

--

By Sarah Urwin Jones
https://www.classical-music.com/reviews/chamber/invisible-stream/