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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Jean-Paul Prat
    Posted: October 14 2007 at 11:13
Prat, Jean-Paul is a French multi-instrumentalist and composer.
I suggested his addition sometime back and in the collab zone there was a long debate about which genre he would fit best into, just to show you the varied influences in his music, the richness of styles and sounds he incorporates and uses in those compositions of his.
 
Here's his bio, according to the booklet in the re-issued album Masal, that Musea released some years ago:
 
Background:

Jean-Paul Prat is a multi-instrumentalist and composer born in Grenoble, France on 27/9/1953. He began his musical path early on due to his mother’s love of music. At the age of 9 he began taking private classical piano lessons. At age 14 he had already learned to play guitar by himself and then the drums by age 15.
He would then be enthusiastic about English rock groups – The Beatles, The Moody Blues, and also with RnB bands for their rhythmic virtues and their use of brass instruments (which was presumably an influence for him for his recordings later on, as can be heard on Masal). At the age of 15, in 1968, he formed with a friend of his a dance orchestra. Prat was playing then the guitar and doing the vocals. As they expanded, he took on playing the organ and later on at the age of 18 switched to drumming and singing. This was an octet that was called Blackbirds, which played then-contemporary music. 18 years old, Prat decided then to study percussion at the conservatoire, but had gotten tired from it soon enough to return to playing music. This period finds him being thrilled with Chicago and Deep Purple.

His next step would be starting to compose by himself in 1971, something that was driven by listening to Magma’s unique music. He wanted to form a band that would perform those compositions, and asked some of his fellow dance orchestra friends.
Joining him on his band in 1973, were his brother Richard Heritier on saxophone, Michel D’angelo on guitar and bass, Denis Borras on bass all of whom came from their previous dance orchestra. To complete this lineup, Prat recruited Georges Rolland on saxophone and Alain Tourral on piano. The chosen name for the band was Masal – Hebrew for luck, fortune or chance (and not as the booklet mistakenly says, it is not “star” which is Kochav).
The music of Masal at that time is described in the cd booklet like this: “Jean-Paul led the new band, handling vocals and wrote the bulk of the band's material in a frenetic vein akin to that popularised by MAGMA. propelled by drums and bass, accentuated by riffs from the brass instruments that exchanged solo roles with the keyboards.”

The band suffered from a changing lineup. August 1973 sees the departure of guitarist Michel D’angelo, but he is not replaced as Prat is content with the band switching to a brass dominated lineup without guitar. Denis Borras decided to be the band’s lighting technician and quit his playing. New bassist Gerard Betemps and keyboard player and vocalist Yves Ottino join Masal. And though he was content with no guitars, guitarist Philippe Christophe joined as well. Alain Tourral then left as well.
The band rehearsed quite a lot in places such as Isere and Les Avenieres and also performed in front of small audiences at places like Ruy, Lyon (with Magma and Spheroe and another one with Gong), Ecully (with Urantia, which was the precursor to Vortex and with Astarte which was later to become Eider Stellaire), Paris and Orleans (opening for Soft Machine) and other places as well; this extensive touring went on for quite some time. The music then was wholly instrumental and the vocals were used, similarly to Magma as another instrument in the lineup.

In 1976, the band took on a temporary break-up for each one to ponder about their musical paths and projects. This period sees Prat exploring other possibilities – playing in a dance band and traveling abroad for over a year. When he started playing music again, he went through playing with 4 different bands (punk and new wave). Prat continued to play and record (not under his name) during this time and for a more detailed version, you can read the liner notes in the Masal cd.

Moving on to 1981, Prat was approached by a concert agent with a proposal to reform Masal and play their music at a concert he was organizing. Prat got excited about this and went on to recruit musicians and form the band, which he wanted to be as big as possible. The lineup he got was made up of Herve Gourru on Bass; Jean-Jacques Willig on keyboards; Richard Heritier on saxophone; Georges Rolland on saxophone; Carlo Grassi on guitar; Norbert Galo on guitar; Viviane Galo on keyboards; Jacques Dessert on cello; Richard Negro on trumpet; Gilles Morard on trombone; Gerard Geoffroy on flutes.
The cd liner notes describe the current incarnation of Masal’s sound like this:
“Jean-Paul's music had undergone changes. Instead of the frenetic wildness of before, it distilled its power into a music of profound serenity and sensitivity. It had now become entirely instrumental, with dense interweaving of themes and counterpoint led by brass and guitar.”
The first show on December 5th 1981 at La Cote-Saint Andre was followed by another one in Isere on July 19th 1982 in which Jacques Dessert was absent and Eric Duval played on percussion. At this point, Prat wanted to record this material as an album. With the help of his family, he financed the project – he hired Venus studio at Longueville (50 km from Paris) for a month. For this album, Norbert Galo and he decided to use one 40 minute long suite for this album. This piece started its life as the song Aubergine, dating from the conservatoire days of Prat in 1972. This piece was later expanded, reworked, linked and integrated with other pieces, all done in various stages and was finally re-named to Masal, like the band name itself.
14 musicians were in the lineup that recorded Masal for the album in July 1982. the double tracking enabled the orchestral sound that the album has. On the vinyl record the piece was forced to be cut into two pieces, but on the cd version the piece can be listened in its entirety without any alterations.
In 1983, Prat finds a small label, Ere Force, who belongs to a larger company called Stand By, which agrees to distribute Masal. In 1986, Musea took charge of the distribution of the album, and in 1995, re-issued it on cd.

Despite a thinning lineup, the band kept on performing. During 1984, the band became the backup band for the Christian singer Alan Nol, for whom Prat was working as manager. Several of the musicians in the band decided to, as the liner notes in the cd say: “declared themselves converts to Christianity and henceforward decided to pledge the band to the glory of God.”
However, two members, Herve Gourru and Georges Rolland did not share those feelings and left the band. They were later on followed (as Prat’s faith and devotion increased) by Carlo Grassi and Jean-Jacques Willig. Now the band had veered into Christian oriented songs as written by Prat. In 1985 they recorded a cassette called "Sans Peur De T'appartenir". Three other tapes followed in the coming years, all with songs about praise of God and Christian nature. Prat, along with Richard Heritier, Alain Escure and Denis Borras have become members of a Christian community.

Music:
The scope of Masal is as extensive as Prat’s instruments he plays on.
The album Masal with its 42 minute long suite covers a lot of grounds – there are elements from zeuhl, symphonic-rock, jazz-rock, avant-rock; and while it is debatable which is the leading characteristic, each has an emphasized role in this orchestral piece and all are well represented throughout its run. It is this broad range of sound to be found here that has lead to this project being included in PA under the Eclectic tag, as this is truly an amalgam of styles, a fabulous mélange of genres and sounds.
While this blending of styles might sound forced, you’ll be surprised just how smoothly and naturally the mix sound and the shifting between parts are. The inclusion of brass instruments alongside the rock instrumentation gives this album, along with the composition style of Prat, its uniqueness, volume and rich sound.
This album will find its audience in the fans of all aforementioned genres. Its richness and compelling sound, its structure and instrumentation, all culminate in a wonderfully built and composed piece of varied music.

Adapted from the extensive biography to be found on the Masal cd re-issues by Musea in 1995 (FGBG 4155.AR).

 
 
 
Here are reviews that will help you see just how eclectic his music is:
http://gnosis2000.net/reviews/prat.htm
 

Reviews:


Sjef Oellers 10-Feb-2001 Masal

This album by Jean Paul Praat is something of a forgotten Zeuhl monster. The style is quite similar to Weidorje, but with fusion and symphonic elements about equally present. Masal might be a bit more accessible than Magma or Weidorje, but it features just as intense interplay with great, over the top bass guitar and good keyboards and drumming. The vocals are partly Magma styled, but less monolithic and overpowering. The more fusion-oriented parts sometimes recall the jazz groups on the ECM label. The CD version includes the full 42 minute version of Masal plus several bonus tracks, which are quite good as well. A recommended album that makes a great, more symphonic companion to Weidorje.



Peter Thelen    11-April-2001 Masal

(Musea FGBG4155.AR, 1982/1996, CD)

A most welcome reissue. Drummer and bandleader Prat had worked with his band Masal from the early seventies, yet their first and only release was this two-sided forty-two minute instrumental opus from nearly a decade later, by which time the band (after numerous stops and starts and personell changes) had grown to a fourteen-piece ensemble of drums, piano, synths, bass, three guitars, two saxes, flute, trumpet, trombone, french horn and percussion. The composition (by Prat) is a symphonic masterpiece that combines the fluid delicacy of Mike Oldfield, the grand symphonics of Clearlight, the rhythmic power and intensity of the zeuhl school, and the classical angularity of Art Zoyd. Going through numerous short sections of three to five minutes each, each linked together seamlessly, the musicians paint a magnificent vision that is rarely equalled in the world of progressive rock. The closest near approximation might be Clearlight's Symphony, yet Masal's approach is more instrumentally varied and conceptually balanced. The original piece was divided at the mid-point (to accommodate the LP medium), but for the CD reissue the two sides have been rejoined as they were originally recorded.

But this is only half the story. How often is it that a CD comes out with bonus tracks that are every bit as good as the original material they augment? In fact that is the case with this reissue: an entire album's worth of solid material recorded after Masal, but never before released, has been added to the round out the CD - four tracks ranging from three minutes to sixteen bring the playing time of the disc right up to the limit of the medium. Most noteworthy is the nine-minute "Maran Atha-Selah", recorded with a six piece lineup in 1985, and the closer - a wordless vocal piece in six-part harmony, recorded in 1990 with a very positive and uplifting spiritual vibe, not far from some of the recent work by Minimum Vital. If there is only one reissue you buy this year, by all means this should positively be it!

(Originally published in Exposי #10, p. 60, Edited for Gnosis 4/9/01)

 
 
 
Highly Recommended!
 
 


Edited by avestin - October 14 2007 at 11:14
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 14 2007 at 11:23
Masal is excellent indeed, Assaf!
 
I'd also highly recommend him to anyone who likes Jazzy and slightly Zeuhl/Avant-ish prog-rockThumbs%20Up
RIO/AVANT/ZEUHL - The best thing you can get with yer pants on!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 14 2007 at 11:45
I absolutely love this album. I posted a recommendation for this one too. If you like this, you also may be interested in "Mais on ne Peut pas Rever Tout le Temps" by Laurent Thibault.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 14 2007 at 11:52
Originally posted by bhikkhu bhikkhu wrote:

I absolutely love this album. I posted a recommendation for this one too. If you like this, you also may be interested in "Mais on ne Peut pas Rever Tout le Temps" by Laurent Thibault.
 
I second that recommendation as well, fabulous and beaufitul album.
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 14 2007 at 14:24
Bump...
 
Another review from GEPR, which is not that impressed with the album, but I believe all opinions should be given:
 
Prat, Jean Paul [France]
Updated 2/16/01

Discography
Genial (Non-existant, see text)
Masal (82, re-issued on CD in 1996 w/ bonus tracks)
Reviews
J. P. Prat, much impressed by Magma, founded the band Masal (which means star in Hebrew) in 1973. They played instrumental music, clearly influenced by Magma, but also with similarities to KC and VdGG. They toured till 76 throughout France, often as opening act for "bigger" groups, for example Soft Machine and Gong, but never recorded an album. A friend of the band, publishing a book containing a discography of French rock, invented for this purpose a fictional Masal LP called Genial. So don't try to find this one if you see it in any discography, it does not exist.

In '76 the band split. In 1981 a concert agent convinced Prat to reform Masal for one concert and because of the great success they recorded an album, which was published in 1982 under the name of J. P. Prat. In 1983 Prat somehow got involved into the Christian faith movement and pledged the band to the glory of god, causing several band members to leave and the band in principle broke up. Musea put out Masals single release in 1996, together with more than half an hour of bonus tracks. The original LP consisted of one piece of more than 42 minutes ("Masal"), because of the vinyl cut in 2 parts (on the CD you have one long track). The band who recorded this consisted of 14 musicians (horns, saxes, flute, 3 guitars, bass, keyboards and percussion) and they played a jazzy, symphonic music with a distinct Magma influence, interrupted by very quiet parts. The bass and brass reminds of Weidorje, whereas some jazzrock-like passages make you think of Zao. All in all this comes along a bit smooth, missing the rough edges and the hypnotic intensity you find in Magma pieces and therefore gets a bit boring during this three quarters of an hour. The bonus tracks where recorded later by Prat and friends, with a very reduced band (4-6 players) and feature a kind of jazzrock. IMHO Masal is interesting, but not really essential. -- Achim Breiling

Anyway, I do recommend this highly and so all other people here who have heard the album (we discussed it quite a lot in the collab area in the forum and everyone seemed to like it a lot).
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 19:33
Another small bump for anyone who missed this....
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2007 at 19:20
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

Another small bump for anyone who missed this....
 
 
 
Bumping the bump....
 
If I had time, I'd write a review...
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2007 at 20:44
I've listened to the album and it's superb, but I couldn't write a decent review - I don't know where this music is coming from and where is it going to (I mean, from the perspective of style), as I'm not familiar with the bands mentioned 'round it. I hope to write a review somewhen though, maybe focusing on the description of the music. The rating would be **** or *****, no doubt about it, a superb recommendation. Thumbs%20Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2007 at 20:51
Originally posted by andu andu wrote:

I've listened to the album and it's superb, but I couldn't write a decent review - I don't know where this music is coming from and where is it going to (I mean, from the perspective of style), as I'm not familiar with the bands mentioned 'round it. I hope to write a review somewhen though, maybe focusing on the description of the music. The rating would be **** or *****, no doubt about it, a superb recommendation. Thumbs%20Up
 
I am far from being an expert on music, history of music ot theory (though I have learned to play the organ for several years) and so when reviewing something I am not sure about (which happened several times, especially with Rational Diet) I go with what the music makes me feel, how I perceive it with my limited knowledge and background etc. I hope it's enough and I'd encourage you to do the same and knowing you, you have more than enough knowledge and background to cover this album without too much effort.
 
Thanks for posting Smile
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