Two Recordings: Wipidoup, Ar Spletenn + Skolvan Ti Ar Seven (Coop Breizh, 2018)


Ar Spletenn Les horloges


The end of September 2018 witnessed an unusual occurrence in Breton music – the simultaneous release of recordings by two of the ‘big namesin the Fest Noz genre. What makes this much more interesting and not a mere coincidence is the shared personnel, songwriters, material, publisher (Coop Breizh) and even similar cover art. Where the similarity ends is the result: one of these recordings is an astonishing piece of work that easily stands up to endless listenings, whereas the other is a pleasant excursion of a classic, well-loved band perhaps resting on its laurels a bit.


The first recording is Ar Spletenn, the 4th release by the group Wipidoup. After an initial trilogy of recordings on the SI Bémol Productions label, Wipidoup has moved to Coop Breizh. It cannot be a coincidence that both of Huiban’s groups moved to this label and released recordings on the same day.


Ar Spletenn contains the same personnel as usual for Wipidoup: Régis Huiban (accordeon), Gildas Le Buhé (vocals and tenor sax), Pierrick Tardivel (bass, ngoni) and Philippe Gloaguen (electric guitar). It is notable that there is no traditional material ‘per seon this recording. All of the instrumentals were written by Huiban. Additionally, he co-wrote the vocal pieces along with Le Buhé. The material still mostly follows the formula that Wipidoup has used on all of their recordings. Rather unusually, a track consists of only a single tune, rather than an integrated medley of tunes as is the norm. Whereas Wipidoup has used variations in arrangement and the juxtaposition of vocals and instrumental sections in the past, here they rely solely on highly developed arrangements. On this recording the balance has shifted towards instrumental material. True to the style of the previous recordings, however, the sound is still, at heart, derived from the vintage chromatic accordion tradition from the early 20th century, but even more saturated with a deep jazz aesthetic. So, what is Ar Spletenn like?


Ar Spletenn is wildly successful. It is Wipidoup’s best effort to date. This is an absolutely wonderful recording, worthy of spending a lot of time with. The compositions are beautiful and touching, the development of melody and arrangement in the pieces is complex and deeply engaging and the performances from each player are among the finest that they have made. While the melody lines might echo Bigouden gavottes or the sound of notable players of long ago such as Yves Menez, these core elements have been expanded upon in imaginative ways to deliver material of that style but without the narrow scope of repetition or limited harmonic character that also characterized them. Track 7, L’elegante, for example, the first section of a Gavottes De Montagne suite, has a melody line instantly recognizable as typical of its type, but the melodic sections are supported and separated by a jazzy underlying groove that utterly transforms it into an extraordinary listening experience (see video for a live performance). Track 3, Jeu de dames, the third part of a Ronds de Loudéac suite, presents a tangled, catchy melody that by the end of the tune has morphed into a completely engrossing riff that rivets the listener’s attention right to the closing note.


Even though there are fewer vocal moments on this recording, Gildas Le Buhé makes the most of them with his warm, powerfully emotional tenor. Track 10, Ton da vale – Er sonnen gouli is incredibly hypnotic and melancholy. Although I fully expected to skip over it in favor of the more rhythmically compelling instrumental material, I have found myself listening to it repeatedly. Rest assured, this recording is full of lovely moments.


The second of the two recordings is the aptly titled Ti Ar Seven, the seventh recording by the legendary group Skolvan. As always, the group’s signature sound is the ‘pistoñ’, a uniquely Breton double-reed instrument situated in a sweet spot between the bombard and the oboe, played by its inventor Youenn Le Bihan.


Ti Ar Seven

This seventh Skolvan release is one of only two not on the famed Keltia Musique label, now sadly defunct. Just by themselves the classic first and second recordings by this group, Musique à Danser and especially  Kerz Ba’n Dans, their finest recording, place Skolvan at the eternal forefront of this genre. As a young listener I both fell in love with Breton music and was inspired to play woodwinds by these two recordings, to give you some idea of their impact. Subsequent recordings 3 through 5 are to varying degrees rather less successful, a sea change marked by the diminishment and unfortunate departure of Yann-Fañch Perroches (accordeon) and Fañch Landreau (violon) who ultimately proved to be truly irreplaceable. These two would then go on together to release the astonishing Daou ha daou, also on Keltia Musique, which surely must also be mentioned when referring to the overall body of Skolvan recordings.


2010’s C’hoari Pevar marked an exciting return to form for Skolvan with the arrival of the talented chromatic accordionist Régis Huiban. Huiban, who had made a name for himself with remarkable undertakings such as Kof Ha Kof with Roland Becker, and of course multiple recordings by the group Wipidoup, served as the cornerstone for a reinvigorated sound. Together with veterans Gilles Le Bigot (guitar), Youenn Le Bihan on pistoñ (oboe), and Bernard Le Dreau (soprano sax), Skolvan once again produced a recording of fascinating ear candy full of intriguing musical ideas. Ti Ar Seven, the new recording, is the sophomore effort of this lineup.


Listeners looking for a fresh blast of classic Skolvan will find this a pleasant but somewhat disappointing recording. I’m conjecturing that Huiban expended the greater part of his creative energy writing all of the material for the Wipidoup release. His relatively few efforts here are still among the best on the disc, however. Other tracks are more problematic, with some of the tunes and licks somewhat derivative of their first recording Musique a Danser,  but just… not as good. The sax solos of Bernard Le Dreau, although technically superb, are surprisingly unimpressive. I’ve listened to these repeatedly, trying to grasp what effect he was going after. What sounds like a light jazz aesthetic results in solo melody lines that feel oddly out of sync with the material.  I just don’t care for the way he plays on this recording.


Still, it’s not a bad album by any stretch. Those who will be happy to hear something new from the musical heroes of their youth will certainly be touched. Those looking for a fresh, intensely creative musical experience, less so. It’s not bad, but it’s not as good as C’hoari Pevar and nowhere near the classic Kerz Ba’n’ Dans.


~ Fañch

04/29/2019

07/27/2018

Darhaou/direnni,/Coop Breizh/2017


Personnel:


Ronan BLEJEAN / Accordéon diatonique  

Etienne CALLAC / Guitare basse

Stéphane FOLL / Biniou

Ronan LE DISSEZ / Bombarde, Piston, Duduk

Olivier URVOY / Clarinette , Saxophone

Erwan VOLANT / Guitare acoustique


Darhaou went on a hiatus for a few years after their third recording ‘An Deirvet’. Featuring vocalist “Krismenn” Christophe Le Menn, “An Deirvet” had an oddly subdued, downbeat and melancholic vibe that certainly wasn’t terrible but did not generate great excitement. Fast forward to 2017 and with a slight reshuffling of personnel Darhaou releases direnni’ perhaps their most interesting recording. Direnni is also notable in that it appears that much or all of the recording was done earlier and there was a considerable delay in release.


For this recording bombard player Ronan Le Dissez’s perennial musical partner Stéphane Foll has joined the group full time, adding the high sound of the biniou bagpipe to the top of the band’s sound in carefully placed sections for most of the tunes for a really exceptional effect. 


Original bass player Pierrick Tardivel has been replaced by Etienne Callac, a veteran of many projects such as the group ‘Kejaj’. Callac brings a uniquely vibrant, pulsing dimensionality to the bottom end that pushes the energy level up.


Ronan Le Dissez breaks away from his use of the bombard in A to add the lower, sweeter sound of the Breton oboe or “piston” to several tracks. This works wonderfully and adds a lot of dimension and depth to the recording. The use of the piston here, combined with some beautiful melodies and careful arrangements, gives a distinctly ’Skolvan’ vibe that most bands are incapable of aspiring to. Dissez also adds, on track 12, Men meur (mélodie), the armenian duduk (a double-reed instrument with an incredibly wide reed and extremely deep, meditative sound) for a contemplative, slow retake of an earlier track. Dissez is one of several bombard players to recently record with the duduk – a small trend.


Many of the tracks on this recording show a depth of arrangement that is clearly a step up from what has gone before. The buildup and then breathtaking release of musical tension on pieces such as Le jus des pommes (tour) propels the listener’s interest with great intensity. While Darhaou has always been able to create music with great drive, here we find more compelling melodies and imaginative arrangements as well. 


The use of the piston also creates a new dimension when paired with the clarinet of Olivier Urvoy, on pieces such as Les cordes (dañs plinn) where the duo engage in gorgeous call-and-response. Urvoy’s ‘treujenn gaol’ sound on the recording is as hauntingly beautiful as ever, with the strange exception of a sax solo on the opening track La belle qui fait la morte (hanter dro) where it comes across as though it were a sampled line added in post-production, curiously lacking in dynamics. I’d love to know what happened there. Interestingly enough, that same track is one where Erwan Volant’s unique and wonderful rhythm  guitar is put to splendid use. Volant, using an electro-acoustic guitar with nylon strings, has an incredible sense of rhythm and a tasty repertoire of jazzy chords that fill the sonic space perfectly.


This a recording that those who don’t bother with anything but the best from this genre of music will definitely want to have and treasure. It’s delightfully good.


- Fañch

07/27/2018

Fleuves/fleuves/Coop Breizh/2017


Personnel:

Samson DAYOU / Guitare basse

Romain DUBOIS / Programmation ,  Fender Rhodes

Emilien ROBIC / Clarinette 

Invités:

Youenn Le Cam / Trompette

Antonin VOLSON / Batterie

Loeiza Beauvir / Chant

Youenn Lange / Chant


“Tout en construisant entièrement son répertoire sur le respect de la danse traditionnelle, Fleuves amène une musique particulièrement originale, électrique, électronique, fractale…dans le monde du Fest Noz.”


Here’s a recording that I actually passed on when it first came out, despite being fascinated by the sound of clarinettist Emilien Robic. I first heard Robic as part of the clarinet/accordeon duo Robic/Guillarme and then also in the group Kentañ on the recording ‘Son al leur’. On that recording there was far too little of him featured as it’s a large ensemble. Robic’s clarinet is truly evocative and true to the traditional treujenn gaol style but with remarkable technical fluency – what a great clarinet sound he has! I longed to hear more from this musician. 


Well, here came this recording on the Coop Breizh website and I eagerly looked at the instrumentation. He was accompanied by bass and then… Fender Rhodes piano? Hmm, that sounded like an odd combination; hard pass. Fast forward several months later and a video came up of this band as I was desultorily surfing the web one evening. I thought, what the heck I’ll give it a listen… WOW. 


I could not have been more wrong about this group. What a fantastic sound: rich, dense, cohesive, complex, driving, beautifully performed. Gorgeous melodies and arrangements. Not a whiff of cheesiness. Incredible. Fleuves has a sound that is simultaneously ultra-modern, deeply traditional and also infused with some retro-sixties  qualities courtesy of the exquisite keyboard work of Romain Dubois. Samson Dayou on bass pumps out dense bass lines that sinuously wrap all around melody and keyboard parts alike. This is really impressive and beyond any doubt the best Breton recording of the year (2017) and perhaps for several years. A gigantic and completely innovative recording.


The basic trio is supported by a few invités, most notably Youenn Le Cam (Alambig Elecktrik, n’diaz) on trumpet, who sounds so great on this recording that he really should just join the band. Like n’diaz, this group also contains significant jazz elements but unlike n’diaz it is much more firmly married to traditional Breton music. Antonin Volson’s drums fit perfectly into the sound; he should also be a regular member as well as far as I’m concerned.


There are two gwerziou vocal tracks on the CD, featuring Loeiza BEAUVIR and Youenn LANGE. These are beautifully done and appropriately moody and melancholic pieces. I must admit, however, that I tend to skip over them to hear more of that engrossing, mesmerizing, fluid, detailed, crazy instrumental sound that the group produces on the rest of the disc.


There is not much more to say about fleuves. This is a highly recommended recording.


- Fañch

08/04/2017

Jean-Michel Veillon & Yvon Riou/Deus an Aod d’ar Menez/Bemol production/2017


The duo of Jean-Michel Veillon and Yvon Riou duo first recorded together on Veillon’s E Koad Nizan in 1993 and then as a duo recorded the landmark Pont Gwenn ha Pont Stang  in 1995 and the live recording Beo in 2000. Shortly after Beo, Veillon’s next project was the 21st century reincarnation of the groups Kornog and Pennou Skoulm, but to my surprise Riou, the obvious choice for guitar, was not included. It appeared that the magical pairing of Riou and Veillon was no more.


So it was with surprise and delight that I recently saw Veillon and Riou begin to perform together again after so many years apart. More recently it was announced that a new CD was in the works and now here it is, Deus an Aod d’ar Menez.


The Breton music scene has evolved substantially in the intervening years. The influence of Irish and other ‘Celtic revival’ sounds has waned considerably, supplanted by an injection of rock and pop influences as well as a re-exploration of the twentieth century Breton early jazz-influenced chromatic accordion repertoire typified most powerfully by the legendary Yves Menez.


For better or worse, much of contemporary Fest Noz music is driven by bigger dance bands with modern instrumentation and by sonic explorations inspired by contemporary popular genres. What place would the intimate pairing of wooden flute and acoustic guitar find in this changed landscape? Would they provide a timeless, moving experience or just a nostalgic blast from the past?


Putting on the disc answered that question the way opening a window in a stuffy room does – with a feeling of freshness and vitality. With the sometimes energetic but forgettable nature of many modern Fest Noz recordings it can be hard to remember what attracted one to this music in the first place – but here it is. The tender, unearthly beauty of Breton music transmitted powerfully and honestly by two players with nothing to prove. Haunting, beautiful music that transports the listener, unencumbered by pandering sentiment or tasteless gimmicks.


This is one of the most touching recordings of Breton music to come along in many years. It is also a clean duet effort with only the most discreet and limited use of multi-tracking and on the closing track Talvoudegezh An Dour, vocals by guest artist Guy Laudren. Unlike their earlier recordings which included a few pieces of Irish music, Deus an Aod d’ar Menez offers only traditional and composed Breton music, which suites my taste exactly. It is a disc that finds itself played again and again while I drive to work, and as a musician I find myself playing some of these melody lines on the saxophone, intrigued with the idea of bringing this emotionally charged quality to a modern band which does include drums, bass, and loud woodwinds.


Bemol production : http://www.bemolvpc.com


-Fañch


05/17/2017

Trio Forj, Rue du chat qui danse, 2017


In January 2017 the group FORJ released its first album, Rue du chat qui danse (Street of the Dancing Cat). Trio Forj is a little unusual in that they specialize in the dance music of Upper or eastern Brittany,  where the indigenous language is not Breton but Gallo.  While a few other bands have a Gallo slant, notably the Hamon-Martin quintet, their material is broadly based and incorporates the bombard (with the incredibly talented Erwan Hamon), giving the overall sound a more typical ‘Breton’ feel.


FORJ was created in 2014 by three musicians from Rennes: Clément Le Goff on vocals, Kenan Guernalec on wooden flute and Alan Valee on 12-string acoustic guitar. The material on this recording is quite strong. Standout tracks include the opening Rond de Loudéac suite and the closing Ridée 6 temps. Throughout, Guernalec’s flute playing is outstanding, with lovely lines and a warm, reedy tone. This is not especially surprising given the rock-solid work on his solo flute album of a few years ago. As an aside, he also, somewhat oddly given his flute skills, plays electric keyboard in the Irish/Breton band Zonk, deferring to Ronan Le Dissez for the flute role. 


Alan Velee is the revelation of this recording with his outstanding 12-string guitar work. While the octave mandolin/bouzouki/cittern is a fairly common instrument in the various flavors of western European folk music, I have long wondered why the 12-string guitar was never used to fill in this role. It is used here and to incredible effect. Valee is just great - great melodies, great chords, great sound. Last and perhaps least is Clément Le Goff’s vocals. Le Goff has a strong baritone and sings in the rather straightforward, unornamented style found in Gallo singing. Most of what he does is quite good, but he does have an unfortunate tendency to ebb in abdominal support towards the end of longer phrases, in which case his vocals fall noticeably flat and more collapse than  come to a graceful end. All in all, though, it’s still pretty good and hence here I am writing about it.


-Fañch


Rue du chat qui danse