French jazz master Vincent Courtois and Swiss
piano wizard Colin Vallon are both inclined
to combine lyrical melodies with abstract
improvisation. Their first joint album features
arrangements of their earlier compositions
and free improvisations, whose tone is defined
by transcendent beauty and a pervading
melancholy.
After the collaboration between French jazz master
Vincent Courtois and American pianist Bill Carrothers
came to an end, the cellist formed a new duo with
Colin Vallon, who shares his penchant for combining
lyrical melodies with abstract improvisation. The two
musicians gave their first joint concert in early 2023.
For their debut album, A Simple Fall, they reworked
their earlier compositions into songs without words,
and complemented them with free improvisations.
The final concept of the album was also influenced
by a domestic tragedy, which inspired the title track.
However, the tone of the album is not defined by the
darkness of grief, but by transcendent beauty and
pervading melancholy. Courtois and Vallon’s approach
continues the tradition of the cello-piano duo, rooted
primarily in classical music, and adds a unique
orchestral dimension to this intimate chamber lineup:
the cello can equally play the role of a percussion,
a harmony or a melody instrument, while the piano
sometimes transforms into a glass harp, a music box,
or a viola da gamba. The result is a kaleidoscopic
musical material that bridges the gap between
classical music, contemporary music, and jazz, and
is permeated by the sense of “free fall” inherent in
improvisation.
Vincent Courtois, whose work spans classical music,
jazz and even film scores, has recorded four albums
for BMC Records in recent years: The Demons of Tosca
was released in 2019, followed in 2023 by Carmen
Rhapsody, conceived by Aki Takase, Nothing else,
with Daniel Erdmann and Robin Fincker, and Twigs,
recorded with Sanne Rambags and Julian Sartorius.
The cellist will also appear on the album of Thérapie de
Couple, led by Daniel Erdmann, which is expected to be
released in the near future. The other member of the
duo is Swiss pianist Colin Vallon, who, with his trio, has
repeatedly shown on his ECM Records albums what is
perhaps his greatest strength: the ability to condense
any mood or emotion into unusual combinations of
sounds. During his studies, he turned from classical
music to jazz; the unique preparation techniques he
has developed are among his most important means of
musical expression.