Pierre Favre | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Le Locle, Switzerland | 2 June 1937
Genres | Jazz |
Occupation | Musician |
Instrument(s) | Drums, percussion |
Labels | ECM, FMP |
Website | www |
Pierre Favre (born 2 June 1937) [1] is a Swiss jazz drummer and percussionist born in Le Locle, Switzerland. [2] [3]
He recorded the album Singing Drums (ECM, 1984) with Paul Motian and Nana Vasconcelos. He also appears on the John Surman album, Such Winters of Memory (1983). [1] He has recorded with several well-known musicians, including Tamia, Michel Godard, Mal Waldron, Paul Giger, Jiří Stivín, Michel Portal, Samuel Blaser, the ARTE Quartett, and Barre Phillips.
At the 1964 Paiste drummer meeting in Frankfurt, Pierre met the Paiste brothers who invited him to visit their factory in Nottwil. Since Pierre has always been interested in cymbals, he was most enthusiastic about accepting their invitation. The Paiste brothers were so impressed with his keen interest and attentive attitude, they offered him a position on their staff to take care of the most important task: cymbal development, quality control and to establish an education/drummer service dept. Pierre left Paiste as a full-time employee in 1970 and was replaced by Fredy Studer.
With Irène Schweizer
With Samuel Blaser
With Philipp Schaufelberger
With John Surman
With Tamia
With Manfred Schoof
With Michel Godard
With Jiří Stivín
With Joe McPhee
With Michel Portal
With Barre Phillips
With Dino Saluzzi
With Mal Waldron
With London Jazz Composers Orchestra
With Stefano Battaglia
With Paul Giger
With Furio Di Castri, Paolo Fresu & Jon Balke
With Denis Levaillant
With Yang Jing
With Andrea Centazzo
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Music by... is an album by American jazz bassist Barre Phillips recorded in May 1980 and released on ECM Records later that year. The sextet features singers Aina Kemanis and Claudia Phillips, saxophonists John Surman and Hervé Bourde, and drummer Pierre Favre.
Fleuve is the second album credited to the Pierre Favre Ensemble, recorded in Switzerland in October 2005 and released on ECM October the following year—twenty two years after the ensemble's 1984 debut, Singing Drums, presenting a new line-up that departed from the previous incarnation's all-percussion sound. The septet now included harp, double clarinet, double bass, tuba, guitar, bass guitar, soprano saxophone, and serpent—an instrument rarely used in jazz.
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Ulrichsberg is a live album by pianist Irène Schweizer and drummer Pierre Favre. It was recorded in May 2003 at Ulrichsberger Kaleidophon in Austria, and was released by Intakt Records in 2004.
Double Trouble Two is an album by Barry Guy and the London Jazz Composers' Orchestra with guest artists Irène Schweizer (piano), Marilyn Crispell (piano), and Pierre Favre (drums). Documenting a large-scale, 47-minute composition by Guy, it was recorded in December 1995 in Zürich, Switzerland, and was released in 1998 by Intakt Records.
Irène Schweizer & Pierre Favre is a live album by pianist Irène Schweizer and drummer Pierre Favre. It was recorded on February 16 and 17, 1990, at Restaurant Schweizerbund in Bern, Switzerland, and was released in 1992 by Intakt Records.