Sylvie Courvoisier | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | November 30, 1968 |
Origin | Lausanne, Switzerland |
Occupation(s) | Composer, musician |
Instrument(s) | Piano |
Labels | Enja, Intakt, Tzadik, ECM |
Website | sylviecourvoisier.com |
Sylvie Courvoisier (born 30 November 1968) is a composer, pianist, and improviser.
Among her many collaborations, she has: led a trio with Drew Gress (bass), Kenny Wollesen (drums); recorded duo and quartet albums with violinist Mark Feldman; and duo albums with Mary Halvorson, Cory Smythe, and Evan Parker.
Courvoisier received numerous awards including the German Jazz Prize, Piano International (2022), and the United States Artist Fellow (2020).
Courvoisier is on faculty at the School of Jazz (The New School). [1]
Career
Courvoisier, originally from Lausanne, Switzerland, has lived in Brooklyn, New York for 25 years. She has led several groups over the years, recorded 10 albums as a band leader, and appeared in about 50 albums (25 CDs as co-leader and 25 CDs as a side person) for different labels, notably ECM, Tzadik, and Intakt Records.
Sylvie Courvoisier has earned just renown for balancing two distinct worlds: the deep, richly detailed chamber music of her European roots and the grooving, hook-laden sounds of the downtown jazz scene in New York City, her home for more than two decades. Few artists feel truly at ease in both concert halls and jazz clubs, playing improvised or composed music. But Courvoisier – “a pianist of equal parts audacity and poise,” according to The New York Times – is as compelling when performing Stravinsky's iconic Rite of Spring in league with flamenco dancer-choreographer Israel Galván as she is when improvising with her own widely acclaimed jazz trio, featuring bassist Drew Gress and drummer Kenny Wollesen. Then there are her ear-opening collaborations with such avant-jazz luminaries as John Zorn, Wadada Leo Smith, Evan Parker, Ikue Mori, Ellery Eskelin, Susie Ibarra, Fred Frith, Andrew Cyrille, Mark Feldman, Ken Vandermark, Nate Wooley and Mary Halvorson. In music as in life, Courvoisier crosses borders with a creative spirit and a free mind; her music-making is as playful as it is intense, as steeped in tradition as it is questing and intrepid. JazzTimes has said: “Courvoisier keeps you on the edge of your seat because it feels like the piano cannot contain her. Her careening solos seem to overwhelm and overflow the keyboard and keep spilling.”
Courvoisier's third album with trio mates Gress and Wollesen is Free Hoops,( intakt 2020) was acclaimed best of 2020 in different jazz magazines, Salt Peanuts, etc.The Sylvie Courvoisier Trio's previous album – D’Agala (Intakt) – garnered a four-star review in DownBeat, while JazzTimes declared the record to be “a wonderland of piano-trio surrealism that is nonetheless grounded in rhythmic earthiness.” It was ranked as one of the best jazz albums of 2018 by The New York Times and Los Angeles Times, as well as New York City Jazz Record. Courvoisier's first album with Gress and Wollesen, Double Windsor (Tzadik), was another hit with critics, being named one of the best albums of 2014 by both Slate and New York City Jazz Record; it also received the “CHOC” from Jazz Magazine and Jazzman in France. International Piano magazine hailed Double Windsor as “a highly original recording, boldly juxtaposing the freely improvised and the through-composed, and crackling with energy… Courvoisier's trio drives its intricate interactions through every tricky twist and tumble in exhilarating fashion.”
Another of Courvoisier's most fruitful artistic relationships is with Israel Galván, the Spanish dancer and choreographer. They have created several projects together over a decade, including La Curva, Arena and the evening-length, improvisation-laced Cast-a-Net. The latter was produced in 2018 at Switzerland's Théâtre du Jorat and Festival Les Jardins Musicaux, with Courvoisier's music performed with the pianist alongside Evan Parker (saxophone), Mark Feldman (violin) and Ikue Mori (electronics). Courvoisier's latest collaboration with Galván is La Consagraciòn de la Primavera: a program that combines a two-piano interpretation of the original score for piano four-hands of Stravinsky's Le Sacre du Printemps (The Rite of Spring) with an original, complementary two-piano score by Courvoisier: Spectro. Courvoisier, alongside piano partner Cory Smythe, premiered the program with Galván in November 2019 at the Théâtre Vidy in Lausanne and in January 2020 at the Théâtre de la Ville in Paris. She has been performing with this project again after the pandemic break.
Among Courvoisier's key duo partners is guitarist Mary Halvorson. They released the album Crop Circles in 2017 via Relative Pitch. Dusted and All About Jazz gave the disc glowing reviews, as did several European publications. And DownBeat set up its four-star review of the album by describing Courvoisier and Halvorson as “two of New York's most distinctive improvisers,” going on to praise the music's “deft, interactive intimacy” and the duo's way of “coming together and then drifting apart with unspoken grace… always serving the cumulative sound but remaining very much themselves.” Courvoisier and Halvorson's new release Searching for the Disappeared Hour (2021, Pyroclastic Records) was recognized as best album of 2021 by the NPR and the New York City Jazz Records.
Avant-garde impresario John Zorn has described Courvoisier as “one of the most creative pianists in the downtown scene.” In recent years, Courvoisier's duo with violinist Mark Feldman toured Zorn's Bagatelles far and wide; they also recorded two albums of Zorn's music: Malphas (Tzadik, 2006) and Masada Recital (Tzadik, 2004). Courvoisier's discography includes more albums with Feldman, including Live at the Theatre Vidy-Lausanne (Intakt, 2013), Oblivia (Tzadik, 2010) and Music for Violin & Piano (Avan, 1999). Their most recent album – Time Gone Out, released by Intakt in 2019 – earned a rave in JazzTimes, with the review singling out Courvoisier's pianism as “staggering… She draws on both low-end thunder and upper-register lyricism, often simultaneously.” DownBeat had further praise, saying that along with the album's poetic intensity and sheer virtuosity, “there is such a playfulness to what they're doing that it's easy to be drawn into the music.”
Courvoisier and Feldman also co-led a quartet that toured the world and recorded three albums: Birdies for Lulu (Intakt, 2014, featuring bassist Scott Colley and drummer Billy Mintz), Hotel du Nord (Intakt, 2011, with bassist Thomas Morgan and drummer Gerry Hemingway) and To Fly To Steal (Intakt, 2010, with Morgan and Hemingway). The Guardian described the band as “part contemporary-classical chamber group and part progressive jazz band… Composition and improvisation held in balance by maestros of the game.” Courvoisier and Feldman also recorded two fully improvised quartet albums: with saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock and drummer Tom Rainey on TISM (RogueArt, 2019), as well as with Evan Parker and Ikue Mori on Miller's Tale (Intakt, 2016).
With reed player Ned Rothenberg, Courvoisier recorded the fully improvised trio disc In Cahoots (Clean Feed, 2016), a trio with Mark Feldman, and more recently Lockdown ( Clean Feed, 2021), a trio with Julian Sartorius
For the album Lonelyville (Intakt, 2007), Courvoisier recorded a suite she composed for a quintet with Feldman, Mori, cellist Vincent Courtois, and drummer Gerald Cleaver. All About Jazz hailed the Lonelyville suite as “fantastic and far-reaching.” In 2004, ECM released Courvoisier's double CD Abaton, which presented her compositions for a trio with Feldman and cellist Erik Friedlander on one disc and the trio's group improvisations on the other. JazzTimes appreciated the mix of “eloquent silences” and “exotic ornaments” in the composed music, as well as “real, gorgeous melody.” About the improvised disc, the review concluded: “It's rare to hear modern classical music forged anew in the heat of improvisation, but that's exactly what Abaton does.” Two early albums as a leader saw Courvoisier leading the ensemble Ocre, releasing the albums Y2K (Enja, 2000) and Music for Barrel Organ, Piano, Tuba, and Percussion (Enja, 1997).
Courvoisier has been commissioned to write music for the theater, radio, and concert hall. Her concert works include a Concerto for Electric Guitar and Chamber Orchestra, as well as Balbutiements for vocal quartet and soprano. She has written to commissions from the Theatre Vidy-Lausanne, Pro Helvetia, and Germany's Donaueschingen Musiktage Festival. Courvoisier has been honored with such awards as United States Artist Fellow (2020), the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists (2018), the Swiss Music Prize (2018), and the SUISA Prize for Jazz (2017). She won the Grand Prix de la Fondation Vaudoise Pour la Culture (2010), as well as an award from the New York Foundation for the Arts (2013) and Switzerland's Prix des Jeunes Créateurs (1996). She has also received commissions from The Shifting Foundation (2019) and Chamber Music America's New Jazz Works (2016).
Born in Lausanne in 1968, Courvoisier grew up in the countryside, studying classical music at the Conservatory of Lausanne and jazz at the Conservatory of Montreux. She has since toured the world from Europe and North America to South America, Asia, and Australia. The pianist has worked in concert halls, jazz clubs, and international festivals with such musicians as Wadada Leo Smith, Andrew Cyrille, Fred Frith, Yusef Lateef, Tony Oxley, Tim Berne, Joey Baron, Joëlle Léandre, Herb Robertson, Mark Dresser, Lotte Anker, Michel Godard, Tomasz Stanko, and Butch Morris. Courvoisier has further collaborated on records with the likes of Ken Vandermark, Nate Wooley, Ellery Eskelin, and Jacques Demierre. She recorded two albums as part of the improvising trio collective Mephista with Ikue Mori and drummer Susie Ibarra: Entomological Reflections (Tzadik, 2004) and Black Narcissus (Tzadik, 2002).
Kevin Whitehead of National Public Radio has encapsulated Courvoisier's art in an evocative way: “Some pianists approach the instrument like it's a cathedral. Sylvie Courvoisier treats it like a playground.”
Courvoisier received numerous awards including the United States Artist Fellow (2020); the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists (2018); the Swiss Music Prize (2018); Switzerland SUISA's Jazz Prize (2017); and Switzerland's Grand Prix de la Fondation Vaudoise de la Culture (2010). She received commissions to compose new works from The Shifting Foundation (2019, 2021, 2022) and the Chamber Music America's New Jazz Works (2016).
She has been a part-time faculty at the New School in NYC since January 2020, teaching ensembles, and privately . Since 10 years, he taught master classes all over Europe and taught ensembles at the Jazz and contemporary schools in Luzern, Basel, Zurich and Bern.
Selected discography
As leader
Year recorded | Title | Label | Notes |
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1994 | Sauvagerie Courtoise | Unit Records | Quintet, with Guglielmo Pagnozzi (sax), Lauro Rossi (trombone), Pascal Portner (drums), Banz Oester (bass) |
1996 | Ocre | Enja | Quintet, with Michel Godard (tuba), Pierre Charial (barrel organ), Mark Nauseef (drums), Tony Overwater (bass) |
2000 | Y2K | Enja | Trio, with Michel Godard (tuba), Pierre Charial (barrel organ) |
2003 | Abaton | ECM -Double album - | Trio, with Mark Feldman (violin), Erik Friedlander (cello) |
2007 | Signs and Epigrams | Tzadik | Solo piano |
2008 | Lonelyville | Intakt | Quintet, with Ikue Mori (electronics), Mark Feldman (violin), Vincent Courtois (cello), Gerald Cleaver (drums) |
2014 | Double Windsor | Tzadik | Trio, with Drew Gress (bass), Kenny Wollesen (drums) |
2018 | D'Agala | Intakt | Trio, with Drew Gress (bass), Kenny Wollesen (drums) |
2020 | Free Hoops | Intakt | Trio, with Drew Gress (bass), Kenny Wollesen (drums) |
2023 | The Rite of Spring – Spectre d'un Songe | Pyroclastic | Duo, with Cory Smythe (piano) |
As co-leader
With Mary Halvorson
- Crop Circles with Mary Halvorson (Relative Pitch, 2017)
- Searching for the Disappeared Hour with Mary Halvorson (Pyroclastic, 2021)
With Mark Feldman
- Music for Violin and Piano with Mark Feldman (Avant, 1999)
- To Fly to Steal – Sylvie Courvoisier-Mark Feldman Quartet with Thomas Morgan and Gerry Hemingway (Intakt 2010)
- Oblivia with Mark Feldman (Tzadik, 2010)
- Hôtel du Nord – Sylvie Courvoisier–Mark Feldman Quartet with Thomas Morgan and Gerry Hemingway (Intakt, 2011)
- Live at Theatre Vidy–Lausanne – Sylvie Courvoisier–Mark Feldman Duo (Intakt, 2013)
- Birdies for Lulu–Sylvie Courvoisier–Mark Feldman Quartet with Scott Colley and Billy Mintz (Intakt, 2014)
- Miller's Tale–Sylvie Courvoisier–Mark Feldman - Evan Parker- Ikue Mori (Intakt, 2016)
- Time Gone Out – Sylvie Courvoisier–Mark Feldman Duo (Intakt, 2019)
With Mephista (Courvoisier, Ikue Mori and Susie Ibarra)
- Black Narcissus (Tzadik, 2002)
- Entomological Reflections (Tzadik, 2004)
With others
- Birds of a feather with Mark Nauseef (Unit Records, 1997)
- Lavin with Lucas Niggli (Intakt, 1999)
- Deux Pianos with Jacques Demierre (Intakt, 2000)
- Passaggio with Joelle Leandre, Susie Ibarra (Intakt, 2002)
- Alien Huddle with Ikue Mori, Lotte Anker (Intakt, 2008)
- Every So Often with Ellery Eskelin (Prime Source, 2010)
- As Soon as Possible with Courtois, Eskelin (CAM Jazz, 2010)
- Either Or And with Evan Parker (Relative Pitch Records, 2014)
- Salt Task with Chris Corsano, Nate Wooley (Relative Pitch, 2016)
- In Cahoots with Mark Feldman, Ned Rothenberg (Clean Feed, 2016)
- Noise of our Time with Ken Vandermark,Tom Rainey, Nate Wooley, (Intakt, 2018)
- Tism with Mark Feldman, Ingrid Laubrock, Tom Rainey (Rogueart, 2019)
- Hoodoos with Jacques Demierre (Catalytic , 2019)
- Lockdown with Ned Rothenberg, Julian Sartorius (Clean Feed, 2021)
As sidewoman
With John Zorn
- Cobra: John Zorn's Game Pieces Volume 2 (Tzadik, 2002)
- Masada Recital (Tzadik, 2004)
- Malphas: Book of Angels Volume 3 (Tzadik, 2006)
- Femina (Tzadik, 2009)
- Dictée/Liber Novus (Tzadik, 2010)
With Erik Friedlander
- 50 Miniatures for Improvising Quintet (Skipstone, 2010)
- Claws and Wings (Skipstone, 2013)
With Herb Robertson
- Real Aberration (Clean Feed, 2005)
- Elaboration (Clean Feed, 2007)
With Nate Wooley
- Nate Wooley Battle Piece (Relative Pitch Records, 2015)
- Nate Wooley Battle Piece II (Relative Pitch, 2017)
- Nate Wooley Battle Piece vI (Relative Pitch, 2018)
- Nate Wooley Mutual Aid Music ( 2021)
References
- ↑ "Sylvie Courvoisier - School of Jazz and Contemporary Music". The New School. 2017-10-12. Retrieved 2021-12-31.
External links
- Sylvie Courvoisier at AllMusic Sylvie Courvoisier on Bandcamp Sylvie Courvoisier discography at Discogs Sylvie Courvoisier discography at MusicBrainz
- Official web site
- List of compositions
Literature
- Rosset, Dominique: Au carrefour des mondes. La compositrice et pianiste lausannoise Sylvie Courvoisier. Zurich 2005.