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Jean-Michel Pilc: A Portrait & True Story
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While plenty of people pay lip service to these ideas, few of them actually demonstrate it so clearly through their music. Pilc isn't a jazz pianist playing classical music or a classical musician playing jazz but, rather, a musician playing and creating music...period.
Jean-Michel Pilc
Jean-Michel Pilc: A Portrait
Living Jazz Archive
2009
Jean-Michel PilcA Portrait, released in 2009 on DVD, is an honest look at an artist in a variety of different settings. The strongest parts of the film deal with Pilc's thoughts on musicoften given in a masterclass-like setting with trombonist
Joe Beaty
tromboneb.1982
Mitch Borden, the owner of New York's Smalls and Fat Cat clubs, touches on the visual nature of Pilc's performances. McCormick, to drive the point home, lines up Pilc's dizzying chromatic lines and aggressive statements with video images of speeding cars and busy street life in New York. The music presented in this film is no less impressive than the ideas that spill out of Pilc's mouth. He touches on low-key gospel-tinged music as the film unfolds but then the next performance is a highly aggressive trio interpretation of "So What." Later, the interplay and stormy exchanges between Pilc, longtime drumming pal

Ari Hoenig
drumsb.1973

Johannes Weidenmueller
bass, acousticb.1966

True Story
Dreyfus Jazz
2010
Pilc's profound music is presented in another setting on this audio disc, where he's joined by bassist Boris Kozlov
bass, acoustic
b.1967Billy Hart
drums
b.1940
The middle of the album features the most straightforward, jazz-centered material. "Kingston, NY" is built on a slow, loping swing groove with a fat bass sound from Kozlov. Every piano note speaks clearly on "Try To Remember" and Pilc's "B.B.B."the longest track on the albumhas strong ties to the music of Thelonious Monk
piano
1917 - 1982Dr. John
piano
1940 - 2019Jacky Terrasson
piano
b.1966
The title of the album is the name of a five-scene suite, with each track lasting around three minutes or so, and a lot of ground is covered. The opening scene has evil undertones, with some deep and cavernous notes arriving from the depths of the piano, but the next scene is almost like a musical depiction of the tides changing. While truth is present in each of these musical stories, beauty and musical greatness are also a large part of the picture.
Tracks and Personnel
Jean-Michel Pilc: A Portrait
Scenes/Tracks: Introduction; So What; Solo Piano Studio Session; Live At The Fat Cat; My Little Suede Shoes; St. James Infirmary; The Other Side; Child, Animal, Groove; Green Spleen; In A Sentimental Mood; Playing And Whistling At Home; Blues For Mac; Cherokee; Epilogue; Credits/Radioactive.
Personnel: Performances and/or Interviews with: Jean-Michel Pilc; Ari Hoenig; Abdou M'Boup; JD Walter; Fran?ois Moutin; Johannes Weidenmueller; Will Vinson; Thomas Bramerie; John Beaty; Joe Beaty; Mitch Borden.
True Story
Tracks: The Other Night; Relic; PBH Factor; A Brief History Of Time; High Sky, The Elegant Universe; Mornings With Franz; Kingston, NY; Try To Remember; B.B.B.; My Heart Belongs To Daddy; True Story Scene 1; True Story Scene 2; True Story, Scene 3; True Story, Scene 4; True Story, Scene 5.
Personnel: Jean-Michel Pilc: piano; Boris Kozlov: bass; Billy Hart: drums.
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