François Lazarevitch, Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien with Fiona McGown and Enea Sorini


Biographie François Lazarevitch, Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien with Fiona McGown and Enea Sorini

François Lazarevitch, Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien with Fiona McGown and Enea Sorini
François Lazarevitch
Although his primary instrument is the flute, from the outset, François Lazarevitch has concentrated his apprenticeships, research and musical practices on the diversity of sources, oral and written, which he deems necessary for recreating the early and Baroque repertoires today. Backed, since 2006, by the companionship of his Musiciens de Saint-Julien, to whom he passes on his craving for going ever further in comprehension, his taste for the discovery of forgotten repertoires and experimental curiosity about all cultures, he takes a singular new look at a whole chapter of our musical history. The driving force? Rhythm, this impulse born of dance and which calls more on what is felt than on what is written on paper and which must imbue all music with flexibility and in awareness. This is why his recordings of Bach’s Flute Sonatas (Alpha Classics, 2014, ‘Choc’ Classica) or Telemann’s Fantasias (Alpha Classics, 2017, ‘Choc’ Classica) surprise and charm with the eloquence, invention and refinement of his art of phrasing and ornamentation.

It must be said that while François Lazarevitch tackles early music and the flute with pioneers such as Antoine Geoffroy-Dechaume, Barthold Kuijken and Pierre Séchet, he also approaches Indian music, has a passion for the Irish flute, and practices music of oral tradition with those who still perpetuate it locally. These fruitful encounters and explorations open up his own path, uncharted and demanding, which he travels, adding strings to his bow: today, he divides his time between the flute and the musette with equal virtuosity, the pastoral timbre having become emblematic of Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien. Artistic director of the ensemble, he conducts it on the French and international music scenes, recording innovative programmes for Alpha Classics, which are regularly acclaimed. He also enriches his experience through collaborations with Les Arts Florissants, Le Concert d’Astrée, Les Talens Lyriques, dancers and choreographers, stage directors and composers of today. An impassioned instrument collector and researcher, he publishes scores of unearthed repertoires. Finally, he teaches Baroque flute and musette at the Versailles Conservatory, eager to pass on what drives him: ‘the freedom of breath in the service of listening, understanding and energy’.

Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien
Their shared affinities with traditional repertoires and musicians enriched their earliest projects and echœd a whole scholarly archipelago of early and Baroque music – the same inventive feeling for colours, the same energy springing from danced movement, the same pœtic sensibility. Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien awaken slumbering musical collections – but not solely – in an approach both erudite and intuitive, rooted in folk practices and filtered through a demanding, virtuosic and passionate appropriation.

Everything in this alchemy is unique and identifies the ensemble even more than the reference to the brotherhood of violinist-dancers that gave it its name: the relief and elegance of the lines, the flexibility of the swaying phrasings, the richness of a rare early instrumentarium in which flutes and bagpipes stand out, the inner fire electrifying even the best-known works of Bach or Vivaldi, the naturalness of expression, which makes every interpretation so familiar yet so new.

In the course of some fifty concerts per year – upcoming: Salle Cortot (Paris), Le Quartz (Brest), Auditorium du Louvre (Paris), Théâtre de Caen, Festival de Saint-Michel-en-Thiérache, Pouchkine Museum (Moscow), Wigmore Hall (London), Musikfestspiele Potsdam Sanssouci…, and thirteeen recordings on the Alpha Classics label, Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien have reinforced a strong presence on the French and international scenes, unanimously praised by the public and specialised press alike.

Fiona McGown
hails from the small town of Chillicothe, Illinois. A Midwest native, Ms. McGowan attended Illinois Valley High School, where she developed her love of music through experiences in the school's marching band.

She continued her studies in Music Education and German at the University of Dayton in Dayton, Ohio. At the University of Dayton, Ms. McGowan was active in the concert, jazz, and marching bands. Some of her most memorable moments include performing with the First Flight Saxophone Quartet and as Drum Major in the Pride of Dayton Marching Band. After graduating in 2012, Ms. McGowan moved to Utah to join the faculty at Juan Diego Catholic High School and St. John the Baptist Middle School, where she is the Director of Bands.

Over the summer you can find Ms. McGowan teaching at various band camps throughout the country, including volunteering with the SWAG Team at the Music For All Summer Symposium.



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