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Thread started 03/22/09 9:06pm

Choukri2Paris

who is Frederic Yonnet ?




He will play Harmonica with Prince the 28th March ? i know he's a French guy Like me but do u know more on him ...
[Edited 3/22/09 22:14pm]
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Reply #1 posted 03/22/09 9:09pm

tangerine7

hmmm
interesting. thanks 4 the heads up. wink
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Reply #2 posted 03/22/09 9:13pm

xlr8r

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awesome
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Reply #3 posted 03/22/09 9:35pm

shellyann

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Oh my Goodness!! I have never heard a harmonica played like that before! Wow!
Leave it to Prince to find, and again expose the talent!
Wake up!......Wake up!
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Reply #4 posted 03/22/09 10:11pm

DigMeNow

.
[Edited 7/7/09 3:12am]
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Reply #5 posted 03/23/09 12:05am

psychodelicide

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He sounds great!!!!
RIP, mom. I will forever miss and love you.
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Reply #6 posted 03/23/09 2:21am

Dayclear

He's gotta be good cause Prince don't have guys opening for him unless they are.
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Reply #7 posted 03/23/09 5:06am

TOMEEBOY

He played with Prince for the two shows in New York back in October to support the 21 Nights book release. He is great!
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Reply #8 posted 03/23/09 5:29am

CHRISLUV92

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awasome eek
aka ChristinaS
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Reply #9 posted 03/23/09 6:09am

brechten

yeah ! i really like him playing on "black friday"
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Reply #10 posted 03/23/09 6:11am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Frédéric Yonnet

Beverley Hills aftershow
Prince grabbed his guitar and they kicked into “Let’s Go” by The Cars. “Crimson and Clover” followed, then Prince shouted for Frederic Yonnet to bust out his harmonica and they ripped into The Stones’ “Miss You,” and I lost my mind! Prince was ten feet away playing Rolling Stones songs.




http://www.fredyonnet.com...N_2009.htm

mentioned in the article



Prince Unveils Plan to Release Three LPs Via Lotusflow3r Website at Private Gig

Written by Steve Appleford as published on RollingStone.com February 2, 2009

The e-mail invitation was vague but intriguing: spend Saturday night at Prince’s mansion in Beverly Hills for “a journey through the galaxy” and a live performance by the man himself.
As the first to arrive, I’m greeted by Scott Addison Clay, the bearded young developer behind Prince’s new Website, lotusflow3r.com. He wears a tweed jacket and sits behind a widescreen computer monitor to show off a bit of the new site, launched just minutes earlier. Leaning against a nearby couch is a sparkling metal cane, with Prince’s “love symbol” etched into the handle.
Clay notes that 10 years before, Prince helped revolutionize the relationship between music and the Internet by being the first major artist to debut music exclusively on the Web. And lotusflow3r.com is where Prince will release three new albums in 2009, including MPLSound, Lotus Flow3r and the unveiling of his newest female protégé Bria Valente.
Then there is a voice behind us: “Can I use my computer?” It’s Prince, smiling in a blue shirt decorated with a stylized drawing of his own image, and shoes with heels that blink colored lights. “It’s OK, I just want to check my e-mail.”
This is his home office, just one corner on a large estate in the exclusive gated community of Beverly Park, in the hills above Los Angeles. In another room is a space-age grand piano with liquid curves and framed snapshots of Chris Rock, Spike Lee, Quincy Jones and other friends. Outside on a pedestal amid the reflecting pools, recording studio and a beach volleyball court is a metal sculpture of his symbol. This is could only be one man’s house.
Downstairs in the home theater, Clay gives a deeper glimpse of what’s coming on the site, set to slowly unfold in coming months. For now, it is limited to a home page with a barren cliff beneath a night sky and three new songs: “Another Boy,” “Colonized Mind” and “Discojellyfish,” which flow from a boombox that glows purple. Fans will eventually be asked to pay a subscription fee to open up other areas of the site, with music, lyrics, animation, photographs and video (including Prince’s cover of Radiohead’s “Creep” at Coachella last year).
Guests are led down the hall, past the pool table and a pair of motorcycles that look like they just rolled off the cover of Purple Rain, toward the sound of a band tuning up in a small room. It’s a crowd of barely 30 people: three invited fans, a few journalists, soul singer Anita Baker, DJ Kat Corbett from KROQ-FM and Miss Valente, tall and elegant in a low-cut dress.
Prince is in the corner with a guitar and the first song is a shimmering cover of the Cars’ “Let’s Go,” followed by “Crimson & Clover” (by Tommy James and the Shondells), before erupting into the Troggs’ “Wild Thing” as Prince raises his guitar, singing like Hendrix himself: “Baby, I think I love you . . . sock it to me!”
He calls harmonica player Frédéric Yonnet up to blow through the Rolling Stones’ “Miss You,” following a tough, sexy groove as Prince announces: “Come on out on the dance floor, come on!” It’s just the first of two sets he’ll lead tonight, and it’s a purely musical performance, without the big production of a tour date, playing vivid originals going all the way back to 1979’s “I Feel for You” and surprising cover tunes, including several Sly Stone hits (”Everyday People,” “Stand,” etc.).
You could see when Prince was especially moved by an emotional vocal from Baker or one of his three backup singers (Marva King, Shelby Johnson and Olivia Warfield), whose solos are epic performances unto themselves. Baker joins him for several duets, including “Guitar.”
“Real music by real musicians,” Prince announces, slipping into another funky psychedelic groove, leaving room for big solos from the band and his own guitar.
Near the end of the second set, it’s nearly 3 a.m. as Prince and bassist Josh Dunham jump into a sticky groove that’s instantly recognizable as a 1976 riff from Wild Cherry. Prince points directly at Clay, his Internet guru, by now pealed out of his tweed at the edge of the dance floor. He calls him over to the microphone, and Clay immediately begins singing, reading from an ovesized lyric sheet: “Play that funky music, white boy! Play that funky music right!”
Prince leans back against drummer Cora Dunham, still slashing at his guitar, eyebrows rising, as if he can’t believe what he is witnessing. But it’s a kind of unbelievable, brilliant moment, one of many during more than three hours of live music. Clay is still dancing behind the microphone, his dress shirt soaked, and for one moment the baddest white dude on the West Coast. “That’s pretty funky, right?” he asks. With Prince and the band behind him, it could hardly be anything else.
###





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Reply #11 posted 03/23/09 6:19am

Putmarroussia

He is a nice down to earth bloke from the Paris suburbian area.

A few french P fans happened to have met him years ago before he had any connection with the music biz.

P met him at the MSG after he played with Stevie Wonder. I guess he loved the guy instantly.
[Edited 3/23/09 6:20am]
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Reply #12 posted 03/23/09 6:19am

monkeyrose

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u know what they say about harmonica players...very good with their mouths ladies!!! (or gents)!
As long as we keep our luv strong we'll never shed no tears
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Reply #13 posted 03/23/09 6:28am

Choukri2Paris

Thank u old friend 4 sale i found this on his Myspace :

http://www.myspace.com/fredericyonnet

When it comes to the harmonica, French-born harmonicist Frédéric Yonnet knows how to turn skeptics into believers. Most people perceive the harmonica as a "side" instrument used in country and blues. However, Yonnet is one of a handful of musicians to successfully demonstrate the harmonica's versatility as a lead instrument in contemporary jazz, as well as other genres of music. Just listen to his sound. It funks. It rocks. It hips and hops. It grooves. It sways. It testifies. It prays. It has a reverence for blues and jazz while appealing to a generation raised on pop, rock and hip-hop. The attention and praise he has garnered from such popular generational icons as Stevie Wonder and Dave Chappelle as well as performances with Erykah Badu, John Legend, India.Arie and Joe McIntyre has helped to expose him and his unique sound on the harmonica to a wide and diverse audience. Believing that "limitations are not in the instrument but in one's thinking," Yonnet is poised to change the way the music industry and enthusiasts regard the "pocket" instrument. Born in Normandy, France, Yonnet picked up the harmonica after a short stint as a drummer. "I love playing rhythms but it's hard to be the frontman on drums... plus the drum kit was alot to move around." Eventually, he revisited an instrument that almost everyone has owned, but few have mastered: the harmonica. In France, Yonnet devoted all of his time to performing in Parisian jazz and blues clubs. Yonnet was a frequent guest musician on "Nulle Part Ailleurs", a show on the French television network Canal +, and he eventually began touring Spain, Germany and Africa with jazz, rock and country bands. During a visit to the U.S., Yonnet jammed at a club and he was totally blown away by the reaction he received from the audience. "Their gracious response let me know that I needed to give them more." And that is exactly what he intends to do with his live performances and recordings. Yonnet's latest CD project positions the artist where he and his music deservingly need to be -- Front and Center. The harmonica takes the lead when Yonnet brings it out front and demonstrates its versatility and range. In Front and Center, Yonnet and his band covers songs like Boogie On Reggae Woman, Days of Wine and Roses, For the Love of You and God Bless the Child. With Front and Center, Yonnet orients listeners to the musical capabilities of the harmonica by keeping much of the music familiar. He pays homage to one of his musical inspirations, Stevie Wonder, with a fast-paced version of Boogie On Reggae Woman. In Days of Wine and Roses, Yonnet shuffles up-tempo workouts with African, Latin and European rhythms to add some "Afropean spice" to the jazz standard. Yonnet goes all out with his bluesy, high-energy interpretation of God Bless the Child. "Including a range of standards and popular cover songs in my repertoire allows people to focus less on the tune and more on my interpretation through the harmonica." And that's not hard to do. After listening to the harmonica virtuoso, one is left in awe of his technical mastery of all twelve keys of the harmonica. While Yonnet's CDs are impressive, it is his live performances that get all the praise. His high energy and ability to play chromatic scales on the diatonic harmonica gives him an unlimited range of notes and sounds, of which he takes full advantage. He demonstrates his command of technique and skill by masterfully bridging the gap between the diatonic and chromatic harps -- impressing fans of both.
[Edited 3/23/09 6:41am]
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Reply #14 posted 04/09/09 9:16pm

fingertips

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i was blown away when he did little wing ...
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Reply #15 posted 04/11/09 7:58am

2Serenity

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I bought his album from emusic.com and was very impressed. I never even thought about buying an album that was all about the harmonica but it is one of my favorites that I listen to often.

You can preview it here for it is called, Front and Center.

http://www.emusic.com/alb...67245.html
Be glad and rejoice for the Lord has done marvelous things!

Joel 2:21
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