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Intercommunal Free Dance Music Orchestra
Apres La Maree Noire
'VERS UNE MUSIQUE BRETONNE NOUVELLE' - If the jazz of François Tusques is "free", his spirit is even more so: having recorded 'Free Jazz' with other like-minded Frenchmen (Michel Portal, François Jeanneau, Bernard Vitet, Beb Guérin and Charles Saudrais), the pianist had covered a lot of ground, with Barney Wilen ('Le Nouveau Jazz') or even solo ('Piano Dazibao' and 'Dazibao N°2'), so as not to repeat himself... In 1971 he founded the Inter Communal Free Dance Music Orchestra which, as the notes the this album stated, "is an interpretation of a music which synthesizes the different communities living and working in France." In 1976, on the first album ('L'Inter Communal') we can already hear Tusques playing without borders in the company of Carlos Andreu (vocals), Michel Marre (trumpet and saxophone), Jo Maka (saxophone) and Ramadolf (trombone). It is a meeting between jazz and music from Catalonia, Occitanie and Africa. So far so good, but what about Brittany, that, Tusques knows "by heart"? Having lived for a long time in Nantes, he would expand his 'brittanitude' on the canal linking the city to Brest by playing with, for example the Diaouled-Ar-Menez. With these "devils from the mountain" who, under the baton of Yann Goasdoué, worked throughout the 1970s on the renewal of music from Brittany, Tusques met, notably, Tanguy Ledoré and invited him one day, with trois bombards and some bagpipes (Jean-Louis Le Vallegant, Gaby Kerdoncuff and Philippe Lestrat), to join the ranks of the Intercommunal. And so they set of towards a new music from Brittany, as the title states; 'Vers Une Musique Bretonne Nouvelle'! With percussion from Samuel Ateba and Kilikus, the association launches the 'bombardier': the repetitions and dissonance of the different members all serve a common cause however: the dance, which is always the reason for the party. This sets a whole universe spinning, which can bring to mind Chris McGregor's Brotherhood Of Breath ('La Rencontre') when not taking on board waltz, swing, blues and gavotta or even revealing mysteries like those of Gurdjieff ('Les Racines De La Montagne' or 'Le Cheval' sung by Andreu). Only one thing to say to this Brotherhood Of Breizh: Mersi!