My NTS
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1
Melbourne
23:00 - 01:00

Australian duo Otologic traverse wave, post punk, outsider club & dubwise meanderings in constant delay.

2
London
00:00 - 01:00

Prolific London based DIY & lo-fi pop producer Keel Her heads to the studio for a show once a month.

Lee Gagnon

Lee Gagnon

Lee Gagnon has been played on NTS in shows including High Noon w/ Dina J , featured first on 9 June 2017. Songs played include Jeremie (Les Filles De Joie, Le Souteneur).

Tenor and alto saxophonist, flutist, arranger, composer. After playing saxophone and clarinet 1956-9 with the Royal Canadian Ordnance Band, he began working in Montreal cabaret and nightclub orchestras in 1959. Gagnon led, in turn, a 10-piece jazz band 1960-6 and a popular jazz quartet (or quintet) 1966-72. The former appeared at the 1962 and 1963 Montreal Jazz festivals and in local clubs. The latter also performed in clubs (including Gagnon's 'Jazztek' at the Café La Bohème), and at Expo 67, on CBC radio (eg, 'Jazz en liberté) and TV, with the MSO, and in 1968 under the auspices of the MACQ on a provincial tour of universities, schools and Cegeps. Gagnon, the pianist Pierre Leduc, and the trumpeter Ron Proby contributed to the smaller group's repertoire. Concurrently Gagnon was music director 1969-72 for the singer Charles Aznavour's North American appearances, then turned to studio work as an arranger and composer. Besides his jazz works, he wrote music for a ballet (based on Marcel Dubé's Jérémie and premiered in 1973 by Les Ballets-Jazz du Québec), many jingles, and scores for several movies, including the features Chantal en vrac (1968), Seizure (1973), and Pousse mais pousse égal (1975), and some NFB and industrial documentaries. Collaborating with the lyricists Jean Robitaille and Luc Plamondon he wrote songs recorded by France Castel, Emmanuelle, and Ginette Reno. In later years he worked in the USA.

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Lee Gagnon

Lee Gagnon has been played on NTS in shows including High Noon w/ Dina J , featured first on 9 June 2017. Songs played include Jeremie (Les Filles De Joie, Le Souteneur).

Tenor and alto saxophonist, flutist, arranger, composer. After playing saxophone and clarinet 1956-9 with the Royal Canadian Ordnance Band, he began working in Montreal cabaret and nightclub orchestras in 1959. Gagnon led, in turn, a 10-piece jazz band 1960-6 and a popular jazz quartet (or quintet) 1966-72. The former appeared at the 1962 and 1963 Montreal Jazz festivals and in local clubs. The latter also performed in clubs (including Gagnon's 'Jazztek' at the Café La Bohème), and at Expo 67, on CBC radio (eg, 'Jazz en liberté) and TV, with the MSO, and in 1968 under the auspices of the MACQ on a provincial tour of universities, schools and Cegeps. Gagnon, the pianist Pierre Leduc, and the trumpeter Ron Proby contributed to the smaller group's repertoire. Concurrently Gagnon was music director 1969-72 for the singer Charles Aznavour's North American appearances, then turned to studio work as an arranger and composer. Besides his jazz works, he wrote music for a ballet (based on Marcel Dubé's Jérémie and premiered in 1973 by Les Ballets-Jazz du Québec), many jingles, and scores for several movies, including the features Chantal en vrac (1968), Seizure (1973), and Pousse mais pousse égal (1975), and some NFB and industrial documentaries. Collaborating with the lyricists Jean Robitaille and Luc Plamondon he wrote songs recorded by France Castel, Emmanuelle, and Ginette Reno. In later years he worked in the USA.

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Jeremie (Les Filles De Joie, Le Souteneur)
Lee Gagnon
Opus1972