Jeux de mains, a striking new album from acclaimed double bassist Joëlle Léandre and inventive composer-performer Rémy Bélanger de Beauport, arrives as a vivid exploration of spontaneous musical conversation. Recorded with immediacy and an acute sense of shared risk, the record captures two master improvisers at the peak of their creative powers.
Across the album’s immersive tracks, Léandre’s visceral arco, percussive pizzicato, and fearless extended techniques meet Rémy Bélanger de Beauport’s textural ingenuity and responsive sonic architecture. The duo’s interplay is telepathic: moments of raw intensity give way to razor-sharp silence, delicate micro-gesture, and slow-blooming drones. Their music dissolves conventional roles—bass as rhythm section or solo voice—and instead treats sound itself as the primary storyteller.
Jeux de mains traces a broad sonic palette that draws from free improvisation, contemporary extended technique, ambient collage, and ritualistic drone. Each piece unfolds as a narrative without words: gestures metamorphose into motifs, textures coalesce into landscapes, and accidental harmonies become focal points of emotional weight. The result is an album that rewards close listening while remaining arresting on first encounter.
Recorded with clarity and an eye for dynamic contrast, Jeux de mains highlights both intimate detail and sweeping tonal arcs. The production preserves the immediacy of the session—the breath, the string scrape, the resonance—so the listener feels present within the exchange.