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Artist
Born near Belfort (France) in 1960, Michel Godard soon established himself as an extraordinarily versatile exponent of the tuba, pursuing a career in jazz and classical music.Today he is one of the most virtous tuba and serpent players in Jazz as well as in improvised music. Michel Godard was admitted at the tender age of 18 to the Philharmonic Orchestra of Radio-France although he had started playing on the trumpet and did not start playing tuba until he was 17. Michel Godard's tuba performance is fantastic in every sense: his technical skill is astounding, his tone clear and warm, his ability to produce overtones ("multiphonics") and his musicality leaves the listener surprised at how light a seemingly cumbersome and heavy-weight tuba can sound. In 1979 he picked up also the ancestor of the tuba, the serpent or "serpentus", an instrument with a latin name derivated after its form - looking like a coiled snake. The serpent's wooden mouthpiece gives it a characteristic warm and intense tone. With this "second" instrument, Michel Godard has taken yet another step in broadening the field of expression in contemporary music as well as in Jazz. On the classical side, Michel Godard played since 1988 with the Radio-France Philharmonic Orchestra, the French National Orchestra, the Ensemble Musique Vivante, the Ensemble Jacques Moderne, and, recently, the ancient music Ensemble La Venice and "XVIII-21Musique de Lumieres". He was also a member of the "Arban Chamber Brass" quintet (no