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Clotilde (Rullaud) ([kloːtildəʼ ʁʏːlɔ], born March 1, 1978, in Reims) is an artistic director, singer, vocalist, flutist, composer, filmmaker, producer and vocal coach.

Clotilde
Background information
BornReims, France
GenresJazz, improvised music, experimental music, folk, latin jazz, world, pop, chanson
Occupation(s)Artistic director, singer, songwriter, Vocalist, composer, filmmaker, producer and vocal coach.
Instrument(s)flute, voice
Years active2003-present
LabelsTzig’Art, Nota Bene Productions
Websiteclotilde.art

Biography



Education


Clotilde was immersed in the performing arts (music, theatre and dance) from early childhood. Aged five, she began studying flute and singing at the conservatoire, before going on to complete her studies in jazz and improvised music at IACP (Paris) and EDIM (Cachan). She also explored opera singing with the tenor singer, Peterson Cowan.

Her musical identity developed through her travels (the Balkans, Ireland, Lebanon, the US) and through her studying of vocal techniques,[1] inspired by Meredith Monk, fado, tango, Romani music, Turkish music, Persian music, Inuit throat singing and Bulgarian voices.


Career


Clotilde has recorded three albums as a vocalist and flutist. She has also directed and produced a short film, and written and directed a multidisciplinary performance.

With a repertoire spanning jazz, free improvisation and folk music, her career as a musician has led her to perform in France, Germany, Australia, Burkina Faso, China, South Korea, Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Taiwan, the United Kingdom and the United States. Since 2007, Clotilde has taught at Martina A. Catella's school, Les Glotte-Trotters,[2] in Paris. She also runs workshops for the festival Les Suds in Arles[3] and for the Ateliers d’ethnomusicologie (ADEM) in Geneva.[4]

In 2002 and 2003, she conceived two live shows inspired by her travel diaries: Sur la route des Tziganes and Monsieur Jazz, both multidisciplinary pieces for seven performers, in which Clotilde sang and danced, as well as narrated.

In 2004, she started working with the guitar player, Hugo Lippi, with whom she recorded her first album, Live au 7 Lézards, three years later.

March 2008 saw the beginning of a new project called In Extremis, a bass-less quartet with Olivier Hutman (piano), Dano Haider (seven-string guitar) and Antoine Paganotti (drums). Their hybrid music takes the audience to a place where the greatest jazz standards rub shoulders with world music, original compositions and pop songs.

Since 2010, Clotilde has developed a collaboration with bandonéonist and composer Tristan Macé. Their first project was Le Diable à froid (2010), a trio with horn-player Albin Lebossé, revolving around the musical and literary styles of surrealism, Dadaism and tango.

Next came Tristan Macé's jazz opera Etrangement Bleu (2011). Their most recent project is Fleurs Invincibles – Invincible Flowers (2012), also involving Emmanuel Bex (piano/organ), Yann Cléry (flutes), Laurent Salzard (bass) and Gautier Garrigue (drums). This bilingual project is based on original compositions by Tristan Macé, and inspired by texts from American poets of the Beat Generation, and black French poets of the 40s and 50s.

In 2014, she started collaborating with the pianist Alexandre Saada. Together, they founded the group Madeleine & Salomon, a minimalist and delicate duo tackling a humanist and rebellious repertoire. Their first album, A Woman’s Journey, is a homage to American female protest songstresses.

In 2017, she moved to New York City to pursue a collaboration with the American pianist, Chris McCarthy, which led to Pieces of a Song, a repertoire of dark and beautiful pieces based on the writings of Diane di Prima, poetess of the Beat Generation.

In 2019, Clotilde took part in the Badara festival in Burkina-Faso, her first encounter with this country where she established multiple artistic collaborations. Each stay gave rise to new creations: the French-Burkinese quintet Sankolé, created in January 2020, the Burkinese-Swiss-French quartet KanFiguè, created in January 2021, and the French-Burkinese quartet Djafolo.

With music proving to be an insufficient medium for her fertile imagination, Clotilde continued her reflections on womanhood by presenting in 2021 XXY, an interdisciplinary play performed by five musicians and five dancers, accompanied with footage of her music and body in motion artmovie XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ] (2018). Grégory Dargent was involved as composer and Mehdi Diouri and Céline Tringali as choreographers.


Artistic approach


Random synchronicities

noun, neologism. Non-illustrative dialogue between two different artistic disciplines expressing themselves irrespectively of each other, yet simultaneously. Poetry of revealed things.[5]

Clotilde revisits the well-known accidental synchronisms of cinematographic creation that Cocteau had already transposed to live performance through Roland Petit, choreographer of the play Le Jeune Homme et la Mort. She creates the conditions for these "prepared accidents", working on the presence in the moment as momentum.

Through these polyphonic works, each artistic discipline plays its own score. Inspired by the same intention, but fully independent from each other in their creative journey, they raise each other to a vibration that they could not have reached separately, thus avoiding the pitfall of illustration. When these scores meet, accidental synchronicities arise that open up new ways of looking at things, laying the foundations for a possible symbolic revolution.


Works



As project leader, artistic director and multidisciplinary artist



As co-lead artist



As guest artist



Awards and critics



XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ]



A woman’s Journey



In Extremis



Live au 7 Lézards



References


  1. "Meredith Monk, "voix mystique", se livre dans un livre et donne deux concerts à Paris". Télérama.
  2. "Les Globes Trotters | Cherche ton Horizon | Le blog de vos voyages". Les Globes Trotters (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-05.
  3. "CHANTER LE MONDE". www.suds-arles.com (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-05.
  4. "Ateliers d'ethnomusicologie - Musiques et Danses du Monde à Genève". adem.ch (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-05.
  5. "Biographie". Clotilde (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-05.
  6. SUDS. "XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ] un questionnement poétique sur grand écran par Cl..." Mediapart (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  7. "Jazz & New Music Grantees 2019". frenchculture.org. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  8. "L'hommage envoûtant de Madeleine & Salomon aux chanteuses engagées". Franceinfo (in French). 2016-11-25. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  9. Jazz, All About. "Madeleine & Salomon: A Woman's Journey album review @ All About Jazz". All About Jazz. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  10. Karl, Lippegaus. "Die besten Klassik und Jazz-CDS des Monats". Fono Forum.
  11. "Top 35 Albums of the Week | KALX 90.7FM Berkeley". Archived from the original on 2022-01-04.
  12. "Weekly Top Airplay: January 9, 2018". WMSE - 91.7FM. 2018-01-09. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  13. "Madeleine & Salomon, voyage à l'intérieur des voix libres". France Musique (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  14. Tchamitchian, Raphaëlle. "Madeleine & Salomon". Citizen Jazz (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  15. A Woman's Journey (in French), retrieved 2022-01-04
  16. "Madeleine & Salomon - Concerts dans le Grand Paris". Télérama.fr (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  17. "Malguénac avec Madeleine & Salomon, Vincent Lê Quang et Sons of Kemet – Jazz Magazine" (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  18. Mathieu, Durand. "Indispensable". JazzNews.
  19. "Oups !!". Citizen Jazz (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  20. "Six disques en vitrine - juin 2016. - CultureJazz.fr". www.culturejazz.fr. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  21. "Jazz rebelle et beaux joueurs". Archived from the original on 2021-10-24.
  22. Nicolaou, Louis-Julien. "10 albums de jazz pour l'été - Les Inrocks". Les Inrocks (in French). Archived from the original on 2021-10-29. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  23. "2013 Totals: Debuts". hullworks.net. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  24. Davis, Clive. "Best Jazz & World 2011". ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  25. Chesnel, Jacques. "Clotilde Rullaud". Citizen Jazz (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  26. "Album Sélection de la semaine Jazz à FIP du 13 au 19 Juin". FIP.
  27. "Madeleine & Salomon - Concerts dans le Grand Paris". Télérama.fr (in French). Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  28. "★★★". Jazzman.

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