Pianist and composer François Bourassa has been a mainstay on the Montreal, Quebec, CA, jazz scene for nearly four decades. A graduate of McGill University, the pianist went to study with Fred Hersch, Miroslav Vitous, and George Russell at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, MA, before returning to Canada where he formed his first "working" trio in the 1980s. In the early 2000s, he formed a quartet with bassist Guy Boisvert, Andre Leroux (tenor and soprano saxophones, flutes) joined in 2010, and Guilliame Pilote (drums) replaced original drummer Greg Ritchie late in the same decade.
"Swirl: Live at Piccolo" (Effendi Music), recorded live over two nights in July of 2022 at Montreal's Studio Piccolo, is the fifth album by the François Bourassa Quartet and the first since 2017's "Number 9". The music, all original material penned by the leader, is, at turns, playful, solemn, contemplative, exciting, filled with sudden twists-and-turns and intelligent interactions. You can tell they are listening to each other. Take the episodic "Pooloop" that opens the program. Sometimes it seems the wheels are coming off but the rhythm section never wavers. The title is a palindrome and there are moments the music has a circular feel. Leroux's soprano sax is out for most of the second half of the 12-minute performance. He switches to flute for the next cut, "Prologue"–he is by himself for the opening two+ minutes. At times, it seems as if he is "mumbling" in the background and in a give-and-take with his louder self. Bourassa enters and the dialogue shifts towards the more dramatic and even more so when the rhythm section enters for the piano solo. The piece moves inward for a bowed bass solo (while Bourassa plays a "dampened" bass.
For more information, go to https://francoisbourassa.com/2011/11/24/francois-bourassa-quartet/. To hear more and to purchase the album, go to
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