Damien Poisblaud (born 13 April 1961 in Maillé in Vendée) is a French cantor specializing in Gregorian chant. He is the director of the Gregorian choir "Les Chantres du Thoronet".[1]
Biography
Damien Poisblaud took interest in gregorian singing in 1980 which he practiced in a choir for more than fifteen years. Alongside his studies in philosophy, he studied art and thought of the Middle Ages.
In 1989, he made a first recording in Thoronet Abbey. In 1991, he created the "Gregorian Choir of the Mediterranean" with which he recorded a Gregorian Requiem which obtained a Diapason d'or in December 1996.[2]
From 1996, he has been singing with Marcel Pérès and the Ensemble Organum. He subsequently followed the teachings of Marie-Noël Colette at the École pratique des hautes études and that of Jean-Yves Hameline[3] on the anthropology of the ritual gesture.
Since 1999, he has been studying the Byzantine Rite following the Greek and Syrian traditions of Aleppo. With the band Les Paraphonistes which he founded in 1998, he undertook to revisit the repertoire of the church fauxbourdons of the 18th and 19th centuries. He recorded a record of these fauxbourdons of the North of France, a "Solemn Mass of the Dead", which was rewarded by a Diapason d'or in July 2000.
^Father Jean-Yves Hameline (1931–2013), musicologist, theologian and liturgist, was a professor at the "Institut supérieur de liturgie". He was also an historian and anthropologist of rites.
^"Le Codex Calixtinus chanté à Cracovie – Le Moyen-âge réactualisé", Dziennik Polski, 27 July 2000.