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Michel Legrand: Hollywood Hitmaker And Jazz Genius

Jazz is the best of all nourishments. It feeds the creative spirit like nothing else can. It is a fantastic adventure, an exciting game of giving and taking and exchanging musical ideas. When the conditions are right, it is possible to achieve a level of rapport that is nowhere else to be found in art.
Michel Legrand

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Phil Woods
saxophone, alto1931 - 2015
Legrand began his career in Paris in the early 1950s, with one foot in chanson and the other in jazz. In the early 1960s, he was adopted by "nouvelle vague" (new wave) film directors such as Jean-Luc Godard and Claude Chabrol as a first-call composer and orchestrator. He went on to make a considerable fortune scoring Hollywood movies in the late 1960s through the 1980s, among them: The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), which included the megahit "The Windmills Of Your Mind," Summer Of '42 (1971), Atlantic City (1980) and Yentl (1983), among many more. In total, Legrand scored over 250 films and TV productions. He won three Oscars and five Grammys.
Born in 1932, Legrand passed in 2019. A modest, private man with a quiet sense of humour, he maintained parallel film and jazz careers until the end. His final appearance at London's

Ronnie Scott
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1996
This survey of Legrand's recordings begins with a near-jazz EP released in France in 1954 and featuring the then Paris-based

Blossom Dearie
piano and vocals1926 - 2009

Légende Du Pays Aux Oiseaux
Barclay EP, 1954
By 1954, aged just 22, Legrand was already in demand on the Paris scene as a pianist, arranger, composer and conductor, with an expanding catalogue of chanson projects. The jazz inflected Les Blue Stars, a close-harmony vocal octet of four women and four men, worked primarily as session singers, and the title track from this four-track EP, an upbeat French language cover of

George Shearing
piano1919 - 2011

I Love Paris
Columbia, 1954
The success of Légende Du Pays Aux Oiseaux will have been one reason Columbia hired Legrand to orchestrate and conduct this collection of chanson and French-themed classics for the American market. The musicsixteen songs which he arranged into a kind of suiteis easy listening but it is sophisticated enough to reward attention (and in 2023 works even better as a shot of retro). Legrand was paid $200, with no royalties, for the album and on the first pressing barely scraped a front of sleeve credit (it is below the track listing). But I Love Paris was a massive best seller and Legrand's international career never looked back. Follow-up Bonjour Paris, released by Columbia in 1957, is just as good. This time out Legrand gets a sleeve credit above the album title, and one imagines he would have negotiated royalties, too.

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Juliette Greco
vocals1927 - 2020

Legrand Jazz
Columbia, 1958
Davis definitely played on this, Legrand's first jazz masterpiece. Also featured: Phil Woods,

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Bill Evans
piano1929 - 1980

Ben Webster
saxophone, tenor1909 - 1973

Donald Byrd
trumpet1932 - 2013

Art Farmer
flugelhorn1928 - 1999

Herbie Mann
flute1930 - 2003

Paul Chambers
bass, acoustic1935 - 1969

Hank Jones
piano1918 - 2010

George Duvivier
bassb.1920

Ernie Royal
trumpet1921 - 1983

Jimmy Cleveland
trombone1926 - 2008

Fats Waller
piano1904 - 1943

Django Reinhardt
guitar1910 - 1953
* Among these a-listers was the emerging star, trumpeter

Joe Wilder
trumpet1922 - 2014

Yusef Lateef
woodwinds1920 - 2013

Paris Jazz Piano
Philips, 1960
Legrand's greatest contribution to jazz was undoubtedly as an arranger and composer, but his gifts carried over into his piano playing. This was far more accomplished than the "arranger's piano" of people such as

Tadd Dameron
piano1917 - 1965

Billy Strayhorn
piano1915 - 1967
Guy Pedersen
b.1930
Communications '72
Verve, 1972
On Communications '72, Legrand puts Stan Getz in front of a string ensemble, a vocal choir featuring Christiane Legrand, and a rhythm section led by organist

Eddy Louiss
organ, Hammond B31941 - 2015

Eddie Sauter
composer / conductor1914 - 1981

Burt Bacharach
composer / conductor1928 - 2023

Images
RCA, 1975
Ignore the wafty sleeve artwork, this is Legrand's second jazz masterpiece. The great Phil Woods first hooked up with Legrand in 1958, on the sessions for Legrand Jazz, and the pair continued to collaborate well into the 2000s. Recorded in London with a large orchestra arranged and conducted by Legrand, the sumptuous Images won a Grammy Award for Best Large Ensemble Jazz Album in 1976. It remains a highwater mark in Woods' catalogue. Legrand plays piano, wrote the scores and wrote or cowrote four of the eight tunes, which include a version of "The Windmills Of Your Mind." The other four tunes are Woods' "Nicole," Leon Russell's "A Song For You," Roger Nichols' "We've Only Just Begun" and Claude Debussy's "Clair De Lune." Legrand's 14-minute mini-suite title track (check the YouTube below) concludes a classy set and Woods, whether full-throttle or caressing, makes the most of it all. This is the kind of affirmatory album about which people say "It saved my life" and when they do so, one believes them. Another recommended 1975 Legrand and Woods collaboration, this one recorded in New York with a small group and an all-Legrand set list, is Recorded Live At Jimmy's (RCA), which has
George Davis
guitar
Ron Carter
bassb.1937

Grady Tate
drums1932 - 2017

After The Rain
Pablo, 1983
Recorded on a single day in May 1982 in RCA's New York studio, After The Rain has the real-time feel of a well-recorded live album. Legrand leads a stellar septet with a front line of Phil Woods on alto and clarinet,

Zoot Sims
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1985

Gene Bertoncini
guitarb.1937

The Warm Shade Of Memory
Evidence, 1996
Something of an anomaly in the Evidence catalogue, which is best known in this parish for its terrific

Sun Ra
piano1914 - 1993

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022

Toots Thielemans
harmonica1922 - 2016

Tribute To Michel Legrand
Jade, 2019
Recorded five months after Legrand passed and rush released before the end of the same year,

Richard Galliano
accordionb.1950

Richard Galliano
accordionb.1950

Le Cinema De Michel Legrand Nouvelle Vague
Universal, 2006
No library of Legrand's music would be complete without at least one collection of his film music. Most of the available CD compilations concentrate on the mainstream Hollywood hits, but Le Cinema De Michel Legrand Nouvelle Vague focuses instead on the French films with which Legrand founded his filmic reputation in the early 1960s. There are selections from Fran?ois Reichenbach's L'Amerique Insolite (1960), Jacques Demy's Lola (1961), Jean-Luc Godard's Un Femme Est Un Femme (1961) and Vivre Sa Vie (1962), Agnès Varda's Cleo De 5 A 7 (1962), Demy, Godard, Philippe de Broca, Claude Chabrol, Sylvain Dhomme, Max Douy, Eugène Ionesco, ?douard Molinaro and Roger Vadim's Les Sept Péchés Capitaux (1962), Demy's La Baie Des Anges (1963) and Godard, Chabrol, Ugo Gregoretti, Hiromichi Horikawa and Roman Polanski's Les Plus Belles Escroqueries Du Monde (1964). And that's a wrap.
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