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Un Drame Musical Instantané
Un Drame Musical Instantané
1
Jean-Jacques Birgé
Jean-Jacques Birgé
avant-garde composer, film director, sound designer, multimedia author, record producer, synthesizer player and multi-instrumentalist
2
Alan Silva
Alan Silva
American musician
3
Didier Malherbe
Didier Malherbe
French saxophonist
4
Henri Texier
Henri Texier
French musician
5
Michel Portal
Michel Portal
French composer, saxophonist, and clarinetist
6
Jef Gilson
Jef Gilson
French musician
7
Daniel Humair
Daniel Humair
Swiss drummer and painter
8
Georges Arvanitas
Georges Arvanitas
Jazz pianist
9
Michel Graillier
Michel Graillier
Jazz pianist
10
Richard Galliano
Richard Galliano
French musician
11
André Ceccarelli
André Ceccarelli
French musician
12
Georges Moustaki
Georges Moustaki
Egyptian-French singer-songwriter of Jewish Italo-Greek origin,; recording artist (1934-2013)
13
Hélène Breschand
Hélène Breschand
14
Sophia Domancich
Sophia Domancich
French pianist
15
Areski Belkacem
Areski Belkacem
French singer, multi-instrumentalist, comedian and composer
16
Lester Bowie
Lester Bowie
American jazz trumpet player and composer (1941-1999)
17
Mac Kac
Mac Kac
French drummer
18
Joëlle Léandre
Joëlle Léandre
French double bassist, vocalist and composer
19
Serge Reggiani
Serge Reggiani
French singer and actor (1922-2004)
20
Carlos Zingaro
Carlos Zingaro
Portuguese violinist
21
Claude François
Claude François
French pop singer, songwriter and dancer
22
Jean-Pierre Drouet
Jean-Pierre Drouet
French composer
23
Aldo Romano
Aldo Romano
Italian musician
24
Bernard Lubat
Bernard Lubat
French jazz musician
25
Jean-Marc Padovani
Jean-Marc Padovani
French saxophonist
26
Barney Wilen
Barney Wilen
French saxophonist
27
François de Roubaix
François de Roubaix
French composer
Intro
French trumpeter

Bernard Vitet (26 May 1934 – 3 July 2013) was a French trumpeter, multi-instrumentist and composer, co-founder of the first free jazz band in France (1964) together with François Tusques, Michel Portal Unit (1972) and Un Drame Musical Instantané with Jean-Jacques Birgé and Francis Gorgé in 1976.

Born in Paris, France, Vitet was involved in the early fusion of jazz and contemporary music with Bernard Parmegiani and Jean-Louis Chautemps. In the 1960s, he accompanied singers such as Serge Gainsbourg, Barbara, Yves Montand, Claude François, Brigitte Bardot, Marianne Faithfull, Colette Magny, and Brigitte Fontaine. He played with jazz musicians such as Lester Young, Archie Shepp, Anthony Braxton, Don Cherry, Chet Baker, the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Steve Lacy, Gato Barbieri, Jean-Luc Ponty, and Martial Solal. In his early years, he performed with Django Reinhardt, Gus Viseur, Eric Dolphy, and Albert Ayler.

Under his own name he recorded Surprise-partie avec Bernard Vitet (on trombone!), La Guêpe on texts by Francis Ponge, Mehr Licht!, and about 200 other records with the aforementioned, plus Jean-Claude Fohrenbach, Georges Arvanitas, Sunny Murray, Michel Pascal, Alan Silva, Alexander von Schlippenbach, Hubert Rostaing, Alix Combelle, Ivan Jullien, Christian Chevalier, Jef Gilson, Jack Diéval, Jac Berrocal, Hélène Sage and 17 albums with Un drame musical instantané. In 1995, he co-signs the songs of Carton with Birgé, with whom he collaborates on music for films, exhibitions, and CD-Roms.

Vitet invented instruments such as a reed trumpet, a multiphonic French horn, a variable tension double-bass, the dragoon which is a giant balafon with frying pans and flower pots keyboard, a clever system of modal clocks, and astonishing musical objects for Georges Aperghis, Tamia, and Françoise Achard. Besides trumpet, he sang and played flugelhorn, piano and violin.

He composed theatre music for Jean-Marie Serrault, and for the films (Les coeurs verts by Édouard Luntz, L'ombre de la pomme by Robert Lapoujade with Jean-Louis Chautemps, Bof by Claude Faraldo in collaboration with Jean Guérin, and La femme-bourreau by Jean-Denis Bonan.

From 1976 to 2008, he devoted himself primarily to Un Drame Musical Instantané with Jean-Jacques Birgé, improvising and composing hundreds of pieces together, experimental essays as well as symphonic pieces, songs as well as music for films. Un D.M.I., as a trio or with their 15-piece orchestra, presented multimedia shows involving cinema, video, literature, dance and new technologies.

Site drame.org offers hundreds of unissued pieces free to listen and download.