Gus Viseur
Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Gustave Joseph Viseur (17 May 1915 – 25 August 1974)Template:Refn was a Belgian/French accordionist.
Early life
Viseur was born in Lessines, Belgium, on 17 May 1915.[1] His father was a bargeman, so the family moved around a lot until 1920, when they settled in Paris.Template:Sfn Viseur was given basic instruction in how to play the accordion by his father from the age of eight, and then had lessons from a music professor.Template:Sfn Father and son played together in an amateur band from 1929.Template:Sfn After his father died,Template:Sfn Viseur "began performing on the streets of Paris in fairs and markets".[2]
Later life and career
In the early 1930s, Viseur played second accordion under bandleader Médard Ferrero.Template:Sfn In 1933, he met René "Charley" Bazin, and the two accordionists started improvising, inspired by hearing jazz.Template:Sfn This led to Viseur forming his own band in 1935.Template:Sfn It played in a variety of styles and recorded four tunes that year.Template:Sfn "Viseur had the reeds in his Fratelli Crosio accordion filed down and retuned", which replaced the traditional vibrato of a musette accordion with a more modern sound.Template:Sfn
Viseur "was a member of the orchestra led by the pianist Boris Sarbek, then worked in France and Belgium with Philippe Brun, Joseph Reinhardt, and his own quintet".[1] Together with guitarist Baro Ferret, Viseur added elements of swing to traditional musettes that they played from 1938 and into World War II.Template:Sfn He had more public attention after recording "L'Accordéoniste" with singer Édith Piaf in 1940.Template:Sfn
He toured the United States in 1963, then stopped playing and opened a record shop in Le Havre.[1] He started performing again around 1970,[1] and recorded the album Swing Accordéon the following year.Template:Sfn Viseur died in Le Havre on 25 August 1974.[1]
Representative recordings
- "Flambée montalbanaise"
- "Joseph, Joseph"
- "Automne"
- "Confessin'"
- "Douce joie"
- "Josette"
- "L'imprévu" (with Joseph Colombo)
- "Nuit de Paris" (with Tony Muréna)
- "Soir de dispute"
- "Souvenir de Bruxelles"
- "Swing accordéon"
- "Swing-valse" (with Pierre "Baro" Ferret)
- "La valse des niglos"
- "Le Bal du p'tit jardin"
- "Jeannette"
- "46ème avenue"
- "5 Juin"
- "El Victor"
- "Lorsque Django jouait"
- "De Clichy à Broadway"
See also
Notes
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References
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Bibliography
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