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The Chaining Loops

The Chaining Loops

Olivier Le Goas | Ensemble Pulse

Label: Double Moon Records
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917147926
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Catalog number: DMCHR 71479
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- Balances jazz roots with modern compositional techniques, making it accessible to both traditional jazz lovers and fans of contemporary, experimental music.\
- The ensemble’s members bring a lifetime of musical encounters across diverse projects, concerts, and international stages, resulting in a deeply seasoned and cohesive sound
- Features award-winning and renowned artists, including members who have performed in prize-winning quartets and prestigious jazz festivals in France and abroad.

The formation of the The Chaining Loops team is the result of encounters that, for the most part, took place over several decades, within various third-party projects of extremely diverse aesthetics. Over the years, this gave Olivier and his associates many opportunities to share a wide range of experiences through different projects, during numerous concerts in France and abroad.

This is how Olivier met vibraphonist David Patrois in 1991, when they were both members of harmonica player Olivier Ker Ourio’s quartet, which—after winning First Prize at the Concours National de Jazz de la Défense in 1993—performed in several concerts throughout France. In 1998, Olivier met cornettist and vocalist Médéric Collignon during Paris jam sessions. Médéric went on to take part in many of the leader’s projects (duo, trios, etc.), including a quartet project featuring pianist Andy Emle. As for guitarist Michael Felberbaum, Olivier first invited him to take part in the European tour New Gravitations, which took place in 2007–2008 following the release of the album Gravitations on Altrisuoni in 2007. In 2013, trombonist Gueorgui Kornazov was already part of the drummer’s septet project Abstract, whose album was released in 2013 on Rewind Records. Double bassist Yoni Zelnik, for his part, has participated since 2015 in several one-off concerts in France and Germany as a member of the leader’s Reciprocity project. Tenor and soprano saxophonist Frédéric Borey is the newest addition to the ensemble.

The name Pulse was inspired for Olivier Le Goas by the word pulsar. A pulsar is a neutron star that rotates very rapidly on its axis. The first pulsar, known as the Cambridge pulsar 1919 (CP1919), was discovered in 1967 by Jocelyn Bell and Antony Hewish.

The Pulse septet project was born during a creative residency in 2021, which benefited from support from DRAC Bretagne. This residency made it possible to develop most of the repertoire featured on the album, with the exception of the album’s eponymous title track, The Chaining Loops, which is more recent and was composed in 2024.

It was only in June 2024, after a session canceled in 2023, that Olivier Le Goas brought the Pulse Ensemble to Studios de la Seine in Paris to record The Chaining Loops.

The album The Chaining Loops presents a special repertoire consisting of five pieces: The Chaining Loops, Direction, Friction, Fifteen Miles, and Light in the Sky.

The Chaining Loops, composed largely in spring 2024, is a large-scale piece built on the interlocking of pattern blocks and the stretching of melodic lines, with song remaining the central axis.

Direction, originally composed for Olivier Le Goas’s group Reciprocity, presents music of a lyrical and energetic character that gradually gains in density, complexity, and unity.

Friction is a suite formed by the aggregation of multiple themes, in which the main opening theme (2021) crystallizes the overall structure of the piece and is based on an interplay of blocks of forces.

Fifteen Miles, dating back to 2016, is a composition that was reworked twice—first in 2021 and again a few months before the recording. It combines an initial theme imbued with a certain gravity, contrasting with a second, more light-hearted theme.

Light in the Sky offers a form composed of multiple arrangements of different thematic and solo sections, in which unexpectedly emerge contours and masses of sound.