Jean-Marie Raymond Explained

Jean-Marie Raymond (born 1949) is a French classical guitarist, composer, conductor and teacher.

Life

Guitarist, composer, teacher and conductor, Raymond studied music at the École normale de musique de Paris with Alberto Ponce and Javier Hinojosa. He was also a student of the world-renowned master Emilio Pujol. He studied musical composition with Yvonne Desportes and conducting with Désiré Dondeyne, both Grand prix de Rome. First Prize in classical guitar, he also obtained the State Diploma and the Certificate of Aptitude.

In 1977, he played as a soloist under the direction of Seiji Ozawa with the Orchestre de Paris. He produced a recording ("Four-handed Guitar" now "Kizuna" in its expanded reissue) with his long-time friend, the Japanese guitarist Minoru Inagaki. He performs internationally as a soloist and with the Trio Sortilèges (flûte, guitar, cello). In 1999, with Thierry Frebourg, CEO of Studio Press (Roularta Media Group), he founded the French: Guitare Classique magazine[1] which occupies a major place in the landscape of the specialized press for the guitar.

A large portion of his compositions is published by Productions d'Oz, Quebec.

Discography

Composer

His best-known compositions, when no publisher is indicated, are published at Productions d'Oz.[2]

  1. El azul de tus ojos
  2. Souvenirs d'Algarve
  1. Andromède
  2. Orion
  3. Cassiopée

He has also composed many pieces for various instrumental ensembles such as:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Guitare Classique . 2018-10-11 . 2010-06-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100621072632/http://guitareclassique.net/spip.php?article369 . dead .
  2. http://www.productionsdoz.com/c378004449.1.html Productions d'Oz
  3. http://www.alphonseleduc.com/FR/vente_recherche_oeuvres.php?instrument=GUITARE&compositeur=RAYMOND&titre=&cotage=&valider=valider&page=1 Alphonse Leduc