Jac Berrocal ‎– La Nuit Est Au Courant


SOUFFLE CONTINU
Jazz / Contemporary / Fusion
New Vinyl
LP / 23 EUR

Cafe Slavia
Et Du Givre Aux Pylones
Early Reflection
Chambre Ouest/Chambre Est
Lidice
Palmyre
Tel Un Effondrement
La Nuit Est Au Courant
Automne Perdu
Fruh In Berlin
Warsawza
Sans Titre (Untitled)

When he published La Nuit est au courant, Jac Berrocal had already recorded his famous “Rock’n’Roll Station” and collaborated three times with Nurse With Wound, he figures on their 1979 list as an important avant-garde influence. In Situ, the French label which published this album, produced several other historically important albums in the same year by people like Steve Lacy, François Tusques, Un Drame Musical Instantané and Daunik Lazro in a duo with Joe McPhee: such were the times!

“Backed by two bassists (including the jazz critic Francis Marmande) and a drummer (Jacques Thollot, who recorded Jeter la girafe à la mer one of the highlights of the French underground), Jac Berrocal does here what he does best: defy labels and slalom between genres; constructing a strange kaleidoscope of enchanting mish-mash. “What is vulgar…”, he states, “…is to refuse what pleases you”. Jac Berrocal refuses nothing and tries everything he can imagine.

With the trumpet multiplied here and there by reverb’, the nocturnal perambulations for insomniacs of La Nuit au courant make it an ambient album with Prague, Sartrouville, Ivry-sur-Seine or East Berlin amongst the backdrops… An album of what Fernando Arrabal called “panic music”, an elegant term for “no wave”… Listening to it over and again, it sounds for all the world like Don Cherry jamming with David Bowie and Brian Eno in Berlin.

There is one thing you should know: Jac Berrocal is an intrepid man. He stands exposed – and “sullies his soul”, on the edge of the precipice. The nights are all-knowing.”

Cafe Slavia
Et Du Givre Aux Pylones
Early Reflection
Chambre Ouest/Chambre Est
Lidice
Palmyre
Tel Un Effondrement
La Nuit Est Au Courant
Automne Perdu
Fruh In Berlin
Warsawza
Sans Titre (Untitled)