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SAPIENS CHAPITRE 3/3: ACTUM

Jean-Pierre Louveton

Crossover Prog


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Jean-Pierre Louveton Sapiens Chapitre 3/3: Actum album cover
3.91 | 35 ratings | 4 reviews | 26% 5 stars

Excellent addition to any
prog rock music collection

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Studio Album, released in 2022

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Paradis Perdu (5:53)
2. Mon Cercueil (6:08)
3. Alias (La machine²) (4:50)
4. Dansez Maintenant (5:12)
5. Memento Mori (23:01) :
- a) Marche vers l'inconnu
- b) Tempus fugit
- c) La mort du roi
- d) Paria
- e) Acta fabula est

Total Time 45:04

Line-up / Musicians

- Jean Pierre Louveton / vocals, guitars, bass, virtual instruments

With:
- Jean Baptiste Itier / drums (1,4,5)
- Florent Ville / drums (2,3), keyboards & programming (3)
- Guillaume Fontaine / keyboards (3)
- Didier Vernet / bass (2,3)
- Stéphanie Vouillot / piano (5c, 5d), vocals (2)
- Marguerite Miallier / hurdy-gurdy (4)
- Sylvain Haon / soprano saxophone (5d)

Releases information

Cover: Stan W. Decker
Label: Quadrifonic
Format: Vinyl, CD, Digital
March 25, 2022

Thanks to mbzr48 for the addition
and to Tuzvihar for the last updates
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JEAN-PIERRE LOUVETON Sapiens Chapitre 3/3: Actum ratings distribution


3.91
(35 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(26%)
26%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(40%)
40%
Good, but non-essential (23%)
23%
Collectors/fans only (9%)
9%
Poor. Only for completionists (3%)
3%

JEAN-PIERRE LOUVETON Sapiens Chapitre 3/3: Actum reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by tszirmay
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
4 stars The intrepid Jean-Pierre Louveton has made a name for himself with French prog band Nemo, with ended its run of brilliant albums in 2015 with the startlingly amazing Coma, deciding to embark on a full-fledged solo career which had already paralleled the band with a series of delicious albums under the moniker JPL, beginning in 2002, Le Livre Blanc (2017) being a masterpiece in my mind.

JPL undertook a huge epic task ,a three-section opus on the human condition (a French fascination with celebrated names like Malraux, Pascal, Zola, Baudelaire, Voltaire, Hugo, Proust, Camus etc..), labelled Sapiens, all three have gorgeous artwork that has created quite a commotion as well. Chapter 1 Exordium (2020), followed by Chapter 2 Deus Ex-Machina (2021) and now Chapter 3 Actum (2022). The first two chapters have received huge critical acclaim, but I will review first this third one, as it is, IMHO, the finest of the trio. In fact, JPL with compile all three into one boxset, with even more glorious artwork, a gift I fully intend to give myself.

For those who are unaware of Louveton's musical qualities, let me state for the record that he is an exceptional electric and acoustic guitarist as well as a fine vocalist in the theatrical French prog tradition (Le Guennec, Decamps, Balzer etc..). He provides an equally deadly bass guitar as well as occasional keyboards. He has a compositional style down pat that highlights melody, harmonics, technical bravura and lyrical commentary (mais oui, it helps to know French). He has always demonstrated prolific tendencies, a mind constantly creative and adventurous. The very first moments set the standard to follow, as an ominous electronic burp morphs into a hard-jazz groove that is truly ear-catching and most pleasant.

"Paradis Perdu" has a crispness, a slash and burn methodology, and a chugging sizzle that are hard to ignore. Nemo drummer Jean-Baptiste Itier propels forcefully as JL rants in Gallic splendour, hushed, raging and exalted, as per the style. His guitar uncorks a humble rip, a prelude of what is to follow further down the setlist. "Mon Cerceuil" is a lazy furrow, eventually evolving into a choppy lament where flute delicacy and rhythmic dread co-habitates skillfully. Drummer Florent Ville taps hard and fast in maintaining the jumpy almost funereal ambience, slowly elevating the angst level with added effusive bombast, as the e-guitar twirls mightily. The outro is a gentle whimper of resolution. Sounding more like classic Nemo, the steamrolling "Alias (La Machine2)" offers desperate vocals, underpinned by harder axe blasts, a slippery bass, berserk synths as well as Ville's thunderous pace. Brash harshness defines the mood here, a pulsating piece full of bold defiance. Other Nemo colleague Guillaume Fontaine helps on keys. The sadness surfaces on "Dansez Maintenant" (Dance now), JP's melancholic vocals serving to set up the almost ZZ Top like rhythm guitar onslaught, as the duet of electric guitar and synths then parallel each other defiantly, in a terrific setting, adding a lovely hurdy-gurdy tidbit to the loud guitars. Very cool and very French.

Epic time as the 5 parts "Memento Mori" lunges ahead, with its running time of 23 minutes. Orchestral maneuvering sets the tempo, a welcome classical overtone that will supply fabulous contrast to the glorious guitar march towards the unknown, choir mellotron in tow. The tortuous frets twist in unison with the bass and drums, creating a glum, almost war-like atmosphere, Itier once again demonstrates his percussive skills with some solid touches. JP delivers hushed yet angry vocals, as he fulminates over the human condition, occasionally tossing sweeter segments verging on insanity. Did I mention theatricality earlier? Even if one does not speak French, the gist will appear in his delivery clear as fractured crystal. The bass pops like the best corn, as the guitar goes on an extended rant, with that patented frizzy overtone that JP seems to favour. Ornate piano from Stephanie Vouillot adds a touch of drama, and a lovely as well as unexpected jazzy soprano sax solo (Sylvain Haon) seals the deal. Nothing sedate, all the material is jumpy, nervous and edgy. The tremendous fifth part pitches in wobbly bass, bombastic mellotron choirs as well as sensational keys, propellent drums and the usual marvellous guitar reflections.

An excellent conclusion to the series, again all three releases combine to provide an amazing modern prog ride, JPL is an artist that needs your attention and support as Nemo was a highly rated and appreciated member of the prog community, and his solo stuff is just an onward journey.

4.5 keepsakes of the dead

Review by kev rowland
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Reviewer
4 stars As one can tell from the title, this is the third and final album in the series from Jean Pierre Louveton, guitarist with Nemo. There are many more musicians involved with this one than the last, but drummer Jean Baptiste Itier (also of Nemo) is still there, the only musician to also feature on the last two releases, which were basically solo ventures by Louveton. Lyrically this concludes the trilogy about human history, all in French, but musically it is so closely related to his time with Nemo that fans of that amazing band (undoubtedly one of my very favourite French acts) need to get this not only due to JPL and Itier playing on this but directly due to the musical qualities.

Louveton has a love for the symphonic, yet also enjoys crunching his guitar so the combination is always an interesting mix, so much so that he has been indicated as crossover within PA but that is because he crosses so many different sub genres within the progressive scene as opposed to playing music which could be thought of as part of the crossover sub-genre itself. He is a musician who follows his own style and the result is an album where the listener is never sure where it is going to go, just that there will always be plenty of guitars, some nice symphonic keyboards and orchestral moments, and someone who knows exactly what he wants to achieve. The result is an album which is thoroughly enjoyable the first time it is played, but the more it is listened to, the more layers there are to uncover. Apparently, this is also now available as part of a 3 CD boxed set containing the other two albums in the series, and that will be a delight.

Latest members reviews

4 stars JPL is therefore releasing its latest opus-baby on homo sapiens, an album supposed to talk about musical progression in a territory that is unfortunately dying; let's go for the note. 'Paradis Perdu' for a bluesy rock with a nice progressive intro, that's enough. 'Mon Cercueil' with a more mar ... (read more)

Report this review (#2882075) | Posted by alainPP | Monday, February 13, 2023 | Review Permanlink

4 stars With a style that combines the most traditional forms of progressive rock with the strength of hard rock-heavy metal, Jean-Pierre Louveton set out to make a trilogy of "SAPIENS CHAPITRE" albums (with a dystopian science fiction theme and certain allusions to the condition human), which would end wit ... (read more)

Report this review (#2754600) | Posted by JohnProg | Monday, May 16, 2022 | Review Permanlink

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