Pierre Cartier is a bassist based in Montréal. He has released a handful of records in the jazz spectrum like Dirigeable (an independant LP release) and Les Fleurs du Tapis (a CD on Ambiances Magnétiques), while being part of Jean Derome et les Dangeureux Zhoms and performing the music of Thelonious Monk with the trio Evidence (with Derome and drummer Pierre Tanguay). If these records showcased
Pierre Cartier mostly as a jazzman,
Chansons de Douve (Songs of Douve) reveals a very gifted composer. This two-CD set revolves around excerpts from Yves Bonnefoy's 1953 book Du Mouvement et de l'Immobilité de Douve (Of Movement and Stillness of Douve), stripped-down poems evoking presence and emptiness, the ghostly existence of a woman: Douve. These poems are sung by soprano Angèle Trudeau and mezzo-soprano Noëlla Huet, along with
Cartier himself who also plays electric bass. The other musicians were mostly recruited from the Ambiances Magnétiques roster: Jean-Denis Levasseur (sax),
Jean Derome (sax and flute), Ivanhoe Jolicoeur (trumpet), Sylvain Jacob (trombone), Tom Walsh (trombone), Pierre Tanguay (drums), and Julien Grégoire (percussion). The music maintains strong connections to chamber and small orchestra contemporary music spiced up with jazz. The influence of
Philip Glass and
Thelonious Monk are the most obvious. Other references would have to include Montréal guitarist
Tim Brady, especially for his cycle Revolutionary Songs, written for his similar Bradyworks ensemble. The beauty emanating from the poems gets amplified through the music: textured moods, at times warm, at times disquieting. Impressive orchestral skills are enhanced by a soothing way of using dissonance. The usually self-effacing bassist has committed to CD an ambitious and strongly poetic work that deserves to be discovered. Strongly recommended. ~ François Couture