Guiot entered the Conservatoire de Roubaix at the age of 7, pushed by a father in love with classical music. In 1947, after two years in Marcel Moyse's class,[2] he won first prize at the Conservatoire de Paris. A few months later, he joined the Opéra de Lille as piccolo under the direction of conductors Fernand Oubradous and Georges Prêtre. There he learned his trade for three consecutive years, playing many operas, operettas and lyrical comedies.
He then taught flute at the École nationale de musique de Calais from 1950 to 1956. It was at this time that he prepared - alone - the Geneva competition, of which he won the first prize in 1954.
In 1956, the French Republican Guard Band of Paris gave him the opportunity to leave Calais.[3] He then started to work a lot for the Parisian recording studios.[4]
First flute at the Opéra de Paris from 1962 to 1991, he also became assistant to Alain Marion at the Conservatoire de Paris in 1977.
Compositions
His compositions are based on classical forms and borrow certain elements from jazz.
Discography
Albums
These albums were mostly made for music illustration labels; they are not albums in the traditional sense of the term, i.e. records sold commercially and distributed in the media.
A very important part of Raymond Guiot's musical activity consisted of recording for the French music world in the 1960s and 1970s, but the musicians were then only rarely credited.
Albums as "Sideman"
1960: André Hodeir - Jazz & Jazz
1962: Elek Bacsik - Bossa Nova (EP)
1969: Le Monde Musical de Baden Powell, volume 2
1970: Claude Ciari and The Batucada Seven
1971: Baden Powell
1973: Maxime Saury - Blue and Sentimental
1977: Baden Powell Canta Vinicus de Moraes e Paolo Cesar Pinheiro
1982: April orchestra - Duty Free, (LP) APR 45
198?: April Orchestra - Mélodies de Cour
Compositions by Raymond Guiot on CD
Sandrine François - Bluesy Prelude, (Hybrid Music, 2008)
Flautissimo vol.29, Hommage à Raymond Guiot
References
This biography is essentially based on the interview Raymond Guiot gave to Traversières Magazine. (No 72, September 2002).
The meeting with the famous teacher was decisive: on the one hand Moyse remedied the still insufficient digital technique of the young flautist and, on the other hand, he offered him precious working methods.
At the end of the Second World War, more than half of the city of Calais was destroyed.
Throughout his career as a studio musician, Guiot participated in three daily recording sessions!
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