
Des pas sous la neige / Grare
JoĂ«l Grare, percussionist and tireless seeker of offbeat sounds and instruments, here presents his third album for Alpha: âFootprints beneath the snow: first sounds of innocence, cowbells and jingle-bells, sounds swallowed up by the mountainâ⊠Through his compositions and inspirational influences, he follows a dizzying emotional Alpine path, along with his amazing instruments: drums, balafon, melodica, sanza, cowbells of all sizes, Japanese drums, trompiki, rainstick, thunder sheet â and his famous âclaviclocheâ. He writes: âOne early afternoon in January 1986 I visited the Devouassoud workshop in Chamonix, manufacturer of the jingle bells and tongued cowbells that adorn the animalsâ necks, filling the mountainside with their chimes⊠I added these new treasures to my percussion set, not realizing that these newbies arranged among my cymbals would eventually become an instrument in their own right⊠Totally unlike church bells, whose pitches are pre-calculated when casting them, the pitch of cowbells is only approximate. The low-pitched bells are called âdullâ, and the high-pitched ones âbrightâ â you need only a few cowbell notes to identify a particular herd. When trying to assemble a full tuned set, you might test several hundred cowbells and pick out just a few⊠To collect a chromatic set of three-and-a-half octaves took me a good twenty years!â
JoĂ«l Grare, percussionist and tireless seeker of offbeat sounds and instruments, here presents his third album for Alpha: âFootprints beneath the snow: first sounds of innocence, cowbells and jingle-bells, sounds swallowed up by the mountainâ⊠Through his compositions and inspirational influences, he follows a dizzying emotional Alpine path, along with his amazing instruments: drums, balafon, melodica, sanza, cowbells of all sizes, Japanese drums, trompiki, rainstick, thunder sheet â and his famous âclaviclocheâ. He writes: âOne early afternoon in January 1986 I visited the Devouassoud workshop in Chamonix, manufacturer of the jingle bells and tongued cowbells that adorn the animalsâ necks, filling the mountainside with their chimes⊠I added these new treasures to my percussion set, not realizing that these newbies arranged among my cymbals would eventually become an instrument in their own right⊠Totally unlike church bells, whose pitches are pre-calculated when casting them, the pitch of cowbells is only approximate. The low-pitched bells are called âdullâ, and the high-pitched ones âbrightâ â you need only a few cowbell notes to identify a particular herd. When trying to assemble a full tuned set, you might test several hundred cowbells and pick out just a few⊠To collect a chromatic set of three-and-a-half octaves took me a good twenty years!â
Description
JoĂ«l Grare, percussionist and tireless seeker of offbeat sounds and instruments, here presents his third album for Alpha: âFootprints beneath the snow: first sounds of innocence, cowbells and jingle-bells, sounds swallowed up by the mountainâ⊠Through his compositions and inspirational influences, he follows a dizzying emotional Alpine path, along with his amazing instruments: drums, balafon, melodica, sanza, cowbells of all sizes, Japanese drums, trompiki, rainstick, thunder sheet â and his famous âclaviclocheâ. He writes: âOne early afternoon in January 1986 I visited the Devouassoud workshop in Chamonix, manufacturer of the jingle bells and tongued cowbells that adorn the animalsâ necks, filling the mountainside with their chimes⊠I added these new treasures to my percussion set, not realizing that these newbies arranged among my cymbals would eventually become an instrument in their own right⊠Totally unlike church bells, whose pitches are pre-calculated when casting them, the pitch of cowbells is only approximate. The low-pitched bells are called âdullâ, and the high-pitched ones âbrightâ â you need only a few cowbell notes to identify a particular herd. When trying to assemble a full tuned set, you might test several hundred cowbells and pick out just a few⊠To collect a chromatic set of three-and-a-half octaves took me a good twenty years!â
















