10/28/2012

L. Subramaniam & Stéphane Grapelli - Conversations


Album:      Conversations
Artist:        L. Subramaniam and Stéphane Grapelli
Year:         1992
Line-Up:    L. Subramaniam – Violin, viola, violectra, tambura, surmandal, percussion
                    Stéphane Grappelli – Violin, piano
                    Joe Sample – Keyboards, piano
                   Mark Massey – Synthesizer, piano
                   Jorge Strunz – Guitar
                   Jerry Watts – Bass
                   Ron Wagner – Drums
                   Frank Bennett – Percussion
                   Frank Morgan – Alto saxophone
                  Handel Manuel – Piano
                  Niles Steiner – Steinerphone
                  Manoochehr Sadeghi – Santoor
                  Anthony Hindson – Electric guitar
Label:     Milestone Records

"Music is a vast ocean and no one can claim to know it all. The more you know, the more you realize how little you know. It is an eternal quest" - Dr L Subramaniam

Conversations is a collaborative album of French jazz virtuoso Stéphane Grappelli and acclaimed Indian musician Dr. Lakshminarayana Subramanian of the Carnatic tradition. It is a conversation between the west and the east, between two violinists of different cultures, a musical exchange and encounter like those of George Harrison and Ravi Shankar, John McLaughlin and Shakti, and John Mayer and Joe Harriott.

Stéphane Grappelli was born to an Italian father and a French mother in 1908 Paris, France. While learning his musical skills in Conservatoire de Paris in the 1920’s, he was also accompanying silent films as a pianist. Grappelli, who is known as the grandfather of jazz violinists, had already worked with numerous well-known jazz musicians and other musicians making him one the most respected violin players outside the art music scene.

Lakshminarayana Subramanian was born in 1947, Chennai, India to two prestigious musicians. He took up the violin before the age of five in the guidance of his father, Professor V. Lakshminarayana. At an early age he also developed a passion for science and has acquired M.B.B.S at Madras Medical College and a Master’s degree in Western classical music in California Institute of the Arts. So not only is he a qualified doctor of medicine, but he can play the Indian violin leaving your mouth wide open and compose ethereal and soothing musical pieces.

At the beginning of the 90’s these Subramaniam and Grappelli decided to join forces and record an album of very interesting musical landscapes, “Conversations”. L. Subramaniam is very keen to mix different elements of Western art music with the musical tradition of his native India, which has led him on a various musical journeys with many different musicians. On this particular album the conversation between the two violins, one Western and one Indian, is a most interesting experience: the violinists play together and separately music full of rich sensations from which a stream of pleasure and enjoyment resonates. The rhythm section is playing rather minimalistic jazz-rock in the background, leaving the spotlight to the amazing string orgy of Grappelli and Subramaniam. It works perfectly. 
 
The songs on this album do not form a coherent whole for there are a few tracks, which seem a bit out of place, like the display of Subramaniam’s virtuosity on the Indian violin (Paganini Caprice 5) and Grappelli on the piano (Tribute to Mani). However it does not take away anything essential from the magic of the rest of the album. Conversations is a vast musical soundscape which these diverse musicians paint together to the pleasure of our ears. It’s about the softness and delicacy of the Western violin and the curious otherness and exotic appeal of the Indian.

Do not take just my word for it, check for yourself:


Written by Oz and edited by Παναγιωτης

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