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Jacques Loussier
Jacques Loussier
French jazz pianist and composer
1
Pierre Michelot
Pierre Michelot
French jazz double bassist
2
Vincent Courtois
Vincent Courtois
French cellist
3
Christophe Coin
Christophe Coin
French cellist
4
Catherine Delaunay
Catherine Delaunay
French musician and composer
5
Gustav Leonhardt
Gustav Leonhardt
Dutch keyboard player, conductor, musicologist, teacher and editor
6
Baden Powell
Baden Powell
Brazilian musician
7
Andrés Segovia Torres
Andrés Segovia Torres
Spanish classical guitarist
8
Alexandre Lagoya
Alexandre Lagoya
French classical guitarist
9
Christian Garros
Christian Garros
French jazz drummer, percussionist
10
Jean-Jacques Kantorow
Jean-Jacques Kantorow
French musician
11
Stéphane Grappelli
Stéphane Grappelli
French jazz violinist
12
Jacques Offenbach
Jacques Offenbach
German-born French composer, cellist and impresario
13
Marie-Claire Alain
Marie-Claire Alain
French organist and organ teacher
14
Jean-François Paillard
Jean-François Paillard
French conductor
15
Ibrahim Maalouf
Ibrahim Maalouf
French-Lebanese trumpeter
16
Mauricio Kagel
Mauricio Kagel
Argentine-German composer
17
Charles Munch
Charles Munch
French musician
Benoit Dunoyer de Segonzac
French musician

Benoit Dunoyer de Segonzac

Intro
French musician
Genres
Music

Benoit Dunoyer de Segonzac (born 1962) is a virtuoso double bass player who performed with Jacques Loussier and Andre Arpino playing renditions by Johann Sebastian Bach / Eric Satie.

A cousin of the painter André Dunoyer de Segonzac, he was born in Strasbourg, where he began to study music at the age of five at the Strasbourg Conservatoire. He completed his professional training on the contrabass at the age of twenty under Vincent Pasquier of the Orchestre de Paris and Jean Marc Rollez, soloist with the Paris Opera.

Dunoyer de Segonzac and the drummer Andre Arpino—have tackled some of today’s most widely heard and popular Baroque classics. Their goal is to play the piece in a manner that updates the sound while remaining true to the spirit of each piece.

The repetitive structure of the Pachelbel allows Loussier and his virtuosic bass player, de Segonzac, to trade the melody and bass lines in a delicious interplay of sounds and ideas. In the Albinoni, similarly constructed with a repetitive harmonic framework, Arpino provides a lively beat in the central section that tempts Loussier to some sassy improvisation.