
Internationally famous composer, director and
producer Thierry David is one of the great names
in new age music. Claude Challe, initiator of
the Buddha Bar compilations, calls David one of
the few French people to legitimately belong to
the genre. On the eve of the release of his new
work Evasions (released in France, May 2007),
this talented creator tells us about several significant
times in his life.
Thierry David was born in Paris in 1955. Rather
than quietly flow through life, David mapped out
his daily life and planned his life’s path.
During his early years he practiced the major
pieces from the classical repertoire before discovering
the freedoms of jazz while still a teenager. “For
my parents,” he remembers, "this confirmed
passion for music was only a hobby.” Upon
graduation from ESSEC, one of the prestigious
business schools in Paris, he flew to Peru as
a volunteer posted to the cultural service of
the French Embassy in Lima. During this long stay
on the other side of the world, David devoted
most of his leisure time to music. When he wasn’t
playing with Peruvian musicians he was composing
his first melodies, inspired by traditional classical
music and enriched with departures into jazz and
excursions into the South American repertoire.
A great traveller who stayed in remote regions
for long periods at the drop of a hat, David succumbed
to the charms of the Andean melodies.
“Rather than rush into a diplomatic or business
career, I attempted the entrance exam for Berkley
College of Music in Boston," he says, and
was accepted into this prestigious institution.
"It was a very hard school that demanded
a genuine personal investment. You had to work
15 to 18 hours a day. The less passionate soon
gave up, a sort of natural selection process,"
he reflects today with the necessary distance.
"On my return to France, I thought my education
in business and music would open the door to a
major record company but nothing I did in this
way succeeded and eventually I accepted a job
as head of advertising with the ad agency Grey.
"We were managing huge budgets and for fun,
I enjoyed composing jingles that only I listened
to. In advertising, roles are divided between
commercial and creative and each has its place,”
he comments. “One day, I don’t really
know how, I was listening to something that I
had created for a new campaign for a famous brand
of underwear. It was accepted. To avoid an awkward
situation and make things more clear-cut, I handed
in my notice and threw myself into my music. From
there, I did everything -- played in piano bars,
gave piano lessons, accompanied jazz groups, rock
groups, heavy metal groups and more. Over time
I signed my first music commissions, first radio
jingles and, above all, gained in experience.
A trained pianist, I learnt to create my own sound
and clearly preferred creating my own musical
world." With this clear view of his art,
Thierry David fully invested himself in the burgeoning
venture Koka Media, which is today recognised
as one of the great musical catalogues. "The
label enabled me to work with other musicians"
he says, quoting a medley of names from the percussionist
Steve Shehan to the guitarist N’Guyen Lé.
“These have been genuine companions on my
journey, artists with whom I have often worked
since."
David says of his musical style, "When my
first commercial record Human Inhuman arrived
on the shelves in FNAC, it crossed many different
styles (classical, jazz, Indian, opera…),
a blend of instrumental music that could be enjoyed
both as relaxing background music not really needing
attention or listened to more intently. Since
the appearance of lounge compilations, we talk
of 'lounge music,' which suits me as long as beyond
the apparent simplicity of the compositions, there
is recognition for the high degree of precision
exercised by the one who takes care over the results,
spending time adjusting the sounds, blending them
and refining the arrangements of his compositions."

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