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Interview for Premiere of “Apricity” Accordion Concerto by Labro…

By Patricia Gendrey

Première mondiale d’une pièce d’un compositeur français à Katara

Julien Labro est accordéoniste, compositeur et arrangeur. Son concerto pour accordéon et orchestre – Apricity – sera joué pour la première fois à Katara, samedi 11 avril. Il nous parle de son travail et du concert de cette fin de semaine.

11136087_10153784367158012_2696041287922935416_oQatar Actu : Quel est votre parcours ?

Julien Labro : Je suis né en France, dans l’Aveyron, à Rodez. J’ai vécu aux États-Unis pendant une dizaine d’années. Je vis aujourd’hui à Toronto.

J’ai commencé l’accordéon à l’âge de 9 ans en regardant une émission à la télévision qui m’a émerveillé. J’ai suivi un cursus emménagé en musique et des études classiques au conservatoire de Marseille. Cette formation m’a ouvert de nouveaux horizons. J’ai alors découvert le jazz et des artistes comme Charlie Parker ou Miles Davis. C’est devenu une passion. J’utilisais tout mon argent de poche pour acheter le maximum de disques, ce qui a contribué à m’ouvrir l’oreille. J’ai trouvé dans le jazz une liberté que je ne retrouvais pas dans le monde classique. J’ai alors réuni bon nombre d’informations sur l’improvisation, l’histoire du jazz. J’ai découvert d’autres artistes comme Herbie Hancock ou John Coltrane. J’étais fasciné, à tel point que j’ai pris la décision de poursuivre, après le baccalauréat, mes études en Amérique du Nord pour être plus près des sources du jazz.

FULL INTERVIEW HERE 

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Interview for Detroit News ‘University Musical Society celebrates the…

By Patrick Dunn

Having presented popular shows last season featuring the ukulele, mandolin and bass saxophone, University Musical Society programming director Michael Kondziolka knew just what obscure instrument he wanted to highlight next.

“We had a lot of positive response to most of the concerts on that … curatorial line that ran through our season,” Kondziolka says. “So it was very much in my mind that we still needed to do something with the accordion.”

The instrument will receive its moment in the spotlight Saturday at Hill Auditorium in an “accordion summit” titled “The Big Squeeze.” Several individual accordionists will be 1236011_863617703656570_2110763999359328775_nfeatured, as well as the Accordion Virtuosi of Russia, a 35-member ensemble. Kondziolka says he envisioned the performance as a tour through the cultural history of the accordion, with the Virtuosi as “our accordion house band.”

“It’s pretty shocking that almost every culture has their own manifestation of the accordion, which in many ways is just a portable organ,” he says. “So it’s really fun, when you start thinking about the accordion and how it manifests itself in different cultures, how you can put an evening together.”

Hot Club of Detroit member Julien Labro will represent the South American heritage of the accordion and its “cousin,” the bandoneon, which features heavily in the music of Argentine tango legend Astor Piazzolla. Labro, who is also co-curating the summit, recalls first being “mesmerized” by the accordion when he saw it on TV at age nine. Full interview here

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Labro featured on The Sound of Applause

Dee Perry chats with Emily Anthes author of Frankenstein’s Cat: Cuddling Up to Biotech’s Brave New Beasts who speaks Friday night at The Cleveland Museum of Natural History for the Explorer Series. Plus we share the music of local country crooners Rachel & The Beatnik Playboys who play The Stocker Center in Elyria this weekend.

Dee also welcomes back accordion master Julien Labro to the Key Bank studio for a preview of his performance at Severance Hall for The Cleveland Orchestra’s Fridays@7 series.

Check the interview & performance here

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Review: Labro/Vieaux @ The Cleveland International Classical Guitar Festival

By Mike Telin
June 3, 2014

The evolution of classical guitar music continued at 7:30 when guitarist Jason Vieaux was joined by his frequent collaborator Julien Labro on bandoneón, accordion and accordina. One always hopes the final concert of a festival will be something special that sends audiences home in anticipation of the next edition and Vieaux and Labro did not disappoint.

Given the two began their musical partnership with their 2011 celebrated recording on the Azica label titled The Music of Astor Piazzolla, it was fitting for them to begin their program with a work by the father of Tango Nuevo. Composed in 1986, Histore du Tango consists of four movements that describe the evolution of Tango. Vieaux and Labro performed the first, “Bordel 1900” and the fourth, “Concert d’Aujourd’hui”.

Originally scored for flute and guitar, the piece is often performed in various instrumental combinations (guitar and bandoneón for this performance) Now for my dirty little secret: I have always hated this piece. That was, until last Sunday night. In the hands of two accomplished musicians who are well-versed in both classical and jazz, Vieaux and Labro’s performance captured the essence of Tango Nuevo. As they would throughout the evening the dynamic duo performed from one musical mind – all unison technical passages, no matter how fast, were perfectly in sync. And they were obviously having a lot of fun during some extended improvisations. Keep reading the full review here

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