Éric_Legnini

Éric Legnini

Éric Legnini

Belgian jazz pianist


Éric Legnini (born 20 February 1970 in Huy, near Liège, Belgium) is a Belgian jazz pianist and bandleader of the Éric Legnini Trio.[1][2]

Quick Facts Background information, Born ...

Legnini was born into an artistic family from Italy. The family immigrated to Belgium, where he started playing the piano at age 6 and initiated in jazz in his teens. In 1988 he traveled to the United States for two years to study American jazz. He returned as a teacher of jazz piano at the Brussels Royal Conservatory of Music, where he met Jacques Pelzer. The result was the Pelzer album Never Let Me Go[3] with guest stars Barney Wilen and Michel Graillier.

He started to play piano in the Stefano di Battista Quartet.[4] In the 1990s, he worked with Flavio Boltro (trumpet) and Stefano Di Battista (saxophone) forming the jazz ensemble Éric Legnini Trio that caught attention in the 1990s.

He has played with fellow artists like Aldo Romano, Belmondo Quintet, John Ruocco, Félix Simtaine, Jeanfrançois Prins, Michel Hatzigeorgiou, Dré Pallemaerts, Emanuele Cisi, Toninho Horta, Philip Catherine, Serge Reggiani, Hein van de Geyn, Marcia Maria, Jacques Pelzer, André Ceccarelli, Éric Le Lann, Paco Sery and others.

Legnini had great admiration for the works of Phineas Newborn, dedicating the piece The Memphis Dude to him. The track appears in his album Miss Soul.

Legnini won "Octave de la musique jazz" in 2006 and "Instrumental album of the year" during 2011 Victoires du jazz for his album The Vox.

Discography

Albums

Éric Legnini Trio

  • 1990: Essentiels (Igloo)
  • 1990: Natural Balance
  • 1993: Antraigues (P Jazz)
  • 1995: Rhythm Sphere (Igloo)
  • 2005: Miss Soul (Label Bleu)
  • 2007: Big Boogaloo (Label Bleu)
  • 2009: Trippin (B. Flat) (peaked in FRA at No. 103)
  • 2012: Ballads (Discograph) (peaked in FRA No. 55)

Eric Legnini and the Afro Jazz Beat

  • 2011: The Vox (Discograph) (peaked in FRA No. 113)
  • 2013: Sing Twice! (Discograph) (peaked in FRA No. 139)

References

  1. Jacques Mercier Belges en France 2006, p.142. "C'est sous la double influence de Kirkland et de Hancock qu'Éric Legnini fait son retour en Belgique en 1990. Aussitôt nommé professeur de piano dans la section jazz du Conservatoire royal de Bruxelles, il retrouve Jacques Pelzer avec qui il ..."
  2. Bruno Demoulin, Jean-Louis Kupper Histoire de la Wallonie: de la préhistoire au XXIe siècle 2004 p375 "Échappant de peu à l'emprise liégeoise, la troisième distingue, entre autres, deux Hutois, le violoniste Jean-Pierre Catoul (1963–2001) et le pianiste Éric Legnini (1970), l'Andennaise Nathalie Loriers (1966), elle aussi rompue à l'art du clavier"

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