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</html><thumbnail_url>https://guerssen.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/291518.jpg</thumbnail_url><thumbnail_width>2000</thumbnail_width><thumbnail_height>2000</thumbnail_height><description>When they performed a handful of concerts as a duo in the summer of 1998, Kristen Nogu&#xE8;s and John Surman had already worked a lot on the interweaving of genres: Nogu&#xE8;s had confronted traditional Breton music with contemporary music and Surman had changed his jazz into atmospheric numbers that would be amongst the finest recording on the ECM label. As a duo, the harpist and the saxophonist would go on to invent something different: free folk, traditional ambient, modal &#x2018;fest-noz&#x2019; &#x2026; it is difficult to label, because the duo Nogu&#xE8;s / Surman is one of a kind.Diriaou, means &#x201C;Thursday&#x201D; in Breton. It is also the title of the first piece that Kristen Nogu&#xE8;s and John Surman played together in 1991. Nogu&#xE8;s learned the Breton language as a child, at the same time as the Celtic harp, &#x2013; taking lessons with Denise M&#xE9;gevand, who would go on to teach others, notably Alan Stivell. At the beginning of the 1970s, Nogu&#xE8;s discovered Breton singing (soniou and gwerziou) At the beginning of the 1970s, she discovered the Breton song tradition (soniou and gwerziou) and became involved in N&#xE9;v&#xE9;no&#xE9;, a cooperative of traditional expression founded by G&#xE9;rard Delahaye and Patrick Ewen. She recorded a single with the two musicians in 1974, then her first album, two years later.Everyone who has listened to Kristen Nogu&#xE8;s debut Marc&#x2019;h Gouez, is now aware of her mysterious plucked strings. Her art, leaving Brittany, would go on to take in all landscapes and folklores, in the same as that of John Surman, conceived a little further north including vernacular jazz, international fusion with Chris McGregor or Miroslav Vitou&#x161;, and exploring more personal territory. Remember the Cornish landscapes in one of the best albums on the ECM label : Road To Saint Ives.Kristen Nogu&#xE8;s and John Surman thus shared an &#x2018;extra-Celtic&#x2019; inspiration infused with free improvisation. On this recording, made in 1998 by Tanguy Le Dor&#xE9; at the Dre Ar Wenojenn festival, the duo uses original compositions which refer back to traditional songs (Maro Pontkalek, Le Scorff). The musicians then create fantastic impressions: Baz Valan, on which Nogu&#xE8;s and Surman have a heavenly exchange; Kernow, on which the shared theme slowing disappears into the mist; Maro Pontkalek and Diriaou which move from the storm to the calm. Elsewhere, there is singing, first with Surman (Kleier) and then moving on to Nogu&#xE8;s (Kerzhadenn and her signature song Berceuse). On a canvas of traditional music, the two musicians weave countless memorable landscapes.</description></oembed>
