Now you can listen
to the best instrumentals music live broadcast of Paul Mauriat
(High
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enjoy
listening to PAUL MAURIAT
music live broadcast.
It requires that you have the Winamp mp3 player or Realplayer7
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Thanks to "Live365" for giving me the
opportinuty to broadcast
my favorite instrumentals music
If your modem speed connection is
56kb/s or less, soon I will add another
channel and
you will be able to listen to this radio.
Master musicains remain masters because, paradoxically, they never stop learning. Even Beethoven, toward the end of his life when he had done enough to be regarded as the greatest of all master musicians, was still broadening his art of composition by studying and learning from the work of Palestrina. No one is going to compare Paul Mauriat with Beethoven (the modest Mauriat, who comes from a long line of distinguished French classical musicians, would be horrified at the very thought). Yet the point has some relevance to Mauriat's career and the remarkable success albums such as"Chitty chitty bang bang" have enjoyed over the years particularly since his version of "Love is blue" rocketed to the no/1 spot in the American hit parade. Paul Mauriat has never stopped listening and learning since he was in very short trousers. First, of course, it was the classics in the family tradition learning the piano at the age of four and proving so talented that he was able to enter the conservatoire at 10 and "granduate" at 14. A youngster might be forgiven at that point for thinking that he knew everything.
Young Mauriat, However, having heard jazz properly for the
first time, suddenly realised how little he really knew. He
quickly set about filling these gaps in his musical education by
studying and listening to everything he could in the vast field
of popular music. At 17 he formed his own orchestra and took it
on tour through France and other continental counties to broaden
his experience. He played every kind of music for every kind of
audience before returning to Paris to begin his final assault on
the pinnacle of fame. More and more great stars in the
entretainment world sought his services as an arranger and in the
meantime he created an immense public demand for the distinctive
sound of his orchestra on its own. Now that demand has become
wold-wide and Mauriat is now at the peak of his powers and fame;
he is no longer a teenager by any means, yet album after album
proves that he is wise enough to keep on listening and learning-
even from youngsters half his age (he didn't learn that throbbing
Mrse-like electronic beat in "Those were the days" at
the conservatoire). Listening, learning, improving that is
constant concern of master musician Mauriat. The result is that,
like "Chitty chitty bang bang," Ian Fleming's
miraculous car, there seems no end to his resourcefulness; he's
proved it well enough in this album, and you can bet he'll do it
againin the next.
I added some mp3 and in
the near future I will try to add more
(Better with Microsoft Internet Explorer).
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