Jean-Marc Larché

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Jean-Marc Larché (* 1961 ) is a French jazz musician ( soprano , alto and baritone saxophone , composition ).

Live and act

Larché completed his music studies at the Besançon Conservatory in 1981 and then completed postgraduate studies at the Paris Conservatory until 1984 . In the next few years he worked primarily with Jean-Louis Méchali , Martial Solal and Michel Edelin as well as in world music with Fawzi al-Aiedy and Anouar Brahem ( Khomsa , Vague ). He was also active in a trio with Michel Godard and Jean-Luc Cappozzo , as well as in the DJOA sextet Claude Sommier and with Jacques Di Donato and Richard Galliano .

In 2002 he played in the Orchester National de Jazz under Paolo Damiani and François Jeanneau and in a trio with François Couturier and Jean-Louis Matinier , with whom he recorded the album Music for a While (2002) and later (reinforced by Anja Lechner ) the albums Nostalghia : Song for Tarkovsky , Tarkovsky Quartet and 2017 Tarkovsky Quartet - Nuit Blanche at ECM . He was also a member of Yves Rousseau's quartet , which has released several recordings since 2004 (most recently Akasha in 2014 ) and for the album Poête, vos papiers! (2008) was expanded to include the singers Maria Laura Baccarini and Claudia Solal . In 2005 Lambert Wilson brought him for his album Nuit Américaine . He can also be heard on recordings by Régis Huby , Frédérique Carminati / Michel Thibault, Boris Mégot and Jacques Bertin .

Larché teaches at the Conservatory in Montbéliard .

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