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Sunday, November 08 2009 @ 05:45 AM EST

Prominent French Musician and Producer Hector Zazou Dies at 60

Obituaries

French composer and renowned world music producer Hector Zazou died this morning in a French hospital. He had fallen seriously ill earlier this year and had to cancel several performances during the summer. Zazou was 60 years old.
 
 Zazou was a legendary figure in contemporary French music. He was born in Algeria, the son of a French father and a Spanish mother. Zazou was an open minded musician who was comfortable working with classical, ambient electronic, pop, and world music. Some of the musicians he collaborated with include Björk, Peter Gabriel, Brian Eno, Laurie Anderson, John Hassell, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Carlos Núñez, Khaled, Lisa Gerrard, John Cale, Siouxsie, Bill Rieflin, Manu Dibango, David Sylvian, Suzanne Vega,  Peter Buck, Jane Birkin, and Lisa Germano. 


The album "Les Nouvelles Polyphonies Corses" (1991) blended century-old a-cappella songs with shades of contemporary music performed by Zazou and occasional collaborators such as Jon Hassell, Manu Di Bango, Richard Horowitz, Ryuichi Sakamoto and John Cale. The following year Hector's "Sahara Blue" was released. The album was based on the work of the French poet Arthur Rimbaud and performed by the Sahara Blue Orchestra stars David Sylvian, Bill Laswell, Khaled, Dead Can Dance, Gérard Depardieu among other guests.

 

Inspired by the musical folk traditions of the Northern Hemisphere, Hector's next adventure was "Songs From The Cold Seas" (1995), a literal journey through Siberian Shamanism, Scandinavian folk songs, Japanese ballads and Greenland mythology featuring an impressive cast of musicians including Värttina, Tokiko Kako, Suzanne Vega, Björk, Siouxsie and Jane Siberry.

 

Released in 1998, "Lights In The Dark" – an exploration of ancient sacred Celtic music from the 12th century featured some of the most beautiful Irish voices (Katie McMahon, Breda Mayock and Lasairfhiona Ni Chonaola), a gospel choir and guest appearances by Mark Isham, Carlos Nuñez, Caroline Lavelle or Peter Gabriel. A successful tour followed in France (Printemps de Bourges), Italy and Switzerland (Montreux Jazz Festival).

 

Recorded with American singer Sandy Dillon, "Las Vegas Is Cursed" (2001) saw the return of Hector Zazou to electricity and experimentation.

In 2003 Hector Zazou composed an original soundtrack for Carl-Théodor Dreyer’s “la Passion de Jeanne d’Arc” while his new album “Strong Currents” was released, a collection of acoustic songs that was the fruit of several years of work (with Jane Birkin, Lisa Germano, Laurie Anderson…).

 

Spring 2004 saw the release of “L’Absence”; an electronic twin of “Strong Currents”. He was then commissioned by ciné-mix and Le Forum Des images in Paris to compose another original soundtrack, this time for Robert Flaherty documentary “Nanouk Of The North”.

 

Hector Zazou’s inventiveness as a producer led him to work with numerous artists among them Tibetan singer Yungchen Lhamo (Real World Records), Galician piper Carlos Nuñez, Uzbek singer Sevara Nazarkhan (Yol Bolsin, Real World Records), Italian band PGR (“Per Grazia Ricevuta”, released by Universal, was hailed as a masterpiece by the Italian press) and among others. 

 

His most recent releases are Corps électriques (2008) and his project with Swara: In the House of Mirrors (Crammed), release this month. “The sounds of the musicians are taken to a sort of “hall of mirrors”, explained Zazou about the new recording, “where, just like in Orson Welles' movie “The Lady of Shanghai”, the sound is reflected from one note to another forming a sort of dune that pushes the musicians to dive under the surface, directly towards the heart of sound”.


  In the House of Mirrors was recorded in Mumbai (Bombay) with Uzbek Toir Kuziyev on oud and tambur, and Indian musicians Milind Raykar on violin and Manis Pingle on “Indian slide guitar.” In addition, the album includes guests such as Spanish piper Carlos Núñez, Nils Petter Molvaer on trumpet, Diego Amador on flamenco piano, Hurshid Oripov on ney, Hungarian Zoltan Lantos on violin and Indian flute player Ronu Mjumdar.

1 comments

The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Authored by: Inasilentway on Tuesday, September 09 2008 @ 09:27 AM EDT Prominent French Musician and Producer Hector Zazou Dies at 60

I first heard the music of Hector Zazou in 1983, whenI was a buyer in a record store in Ann Arbor, Michigan after returning form five years in Fance. Noir et Blanc was sent to me by the jazz and improv clarinetist Beth Custer who was, at that time, working as a salesperson for Rough Trade in San Francisco. The album--on Crammed--featured Zazou's compositions with the great Zairean vocalist Boni Bikaye with contributions from Mad Scientist CY1. That record sounded completely out of time and space. It was compared a lot to Byrne and Eno's My LIfe In The Bush Of Ghosts, but it was way beyond that. This album showed the harder minimal side of beat conscious electronics (a la minimal, but jarring techno) with Bikaye's wonderful raspy voice offering a kind of chanted folk music from the future when wedded to the effects. This album still sounds ahead of its time. I followed Zazou quite carefully after that recording; sometimes he was amazing, sometimes way off, but was always true to himself as a composer and  as an artist and did exactly what he wanted to do. On Friday, here at the AMG offices, I opened my mail and with delight found a new album by Hector. I am tremendously sad reading reading this news, but also very grateful for the voluminous body of work that will no doubt be passed around, discussed, and debated for a long time to come.

 

Thom Jurek

All-Music Guide

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