How old is Erik? 8, 9 years old? On a ball night, the girls put on pastel dresses, the boys tied their ties neatly, and the humidity electrified the air. Erik is the conductor’s son; in these peripheral nights, that gives him a certain status, almost an immunity. And yet, he is afraid. He grabs his trumpet, presses the three pistons to convince himself they still respond, and blows. His first improvisation is on a song by Sacha Distel: "L’argent... l’argent", where it is said that happiness is worth more than money. It was a fitting choice—he made it his life's path.
He was born in the early 1960s, in an in-between territory that is neither truly France nor quite Switzerland—the Pays de Gex, with its brass bands and thus its Saturday night balls, where music serves only a few precise functions: breaking down inner and outer walls, soaking backs in sweat, hurting feet, and finding a shoulder to nestle against. Every portrait of Erik Truffaz highlights the experimenter, the all-terrain artist, his ability to slip into a symphonic work, behind Indian tablas, or into distorted guitars battling walls of sound. But one cannot truly grasp his intimate odyssey without realizing that, for him, music is, above all, an unstoppable means of falling in love.
Very early on, he banged his brain against binary music. The first concert of his life was Joe Dassin. Later, free to choose for himself, he devoured Pink Floyd, electric Miles, and free zones where his shyness—his way of pulling his shoulders inward—was offset by the sheer power of the environment. Young Erik Truffaz was seen breathing life into a rap group in Lausanne, Silent Majority, then making night trips to London to play at Drum 'n' Bass parties. Erik Truffaz realized that his trumpet spoke a new Esperanto, capable of constructing the most unexpected landscapes. It became his planetary visa, his seven-league boots, his pass-through-walls.
Thus, Erik possesses an extraordinary toy to help him conquer the world. But he still needs a brigade, a solid little troop, to carve out vast landscapes for him and shield him from fear. About thirty years ago, the Erik Truffaz Quartet became one of the best time-exploring machines ever known. For the Blue Note label, they crafted classics of their time, jazz infused with electronic rhythms—"The Dawn", "Bending New Corners". They only realized their phenomenal success when, in Marseille, they faced a human tide waiting hopelessly outside the club where the quartet was to play that night.
One would have advised Erik Truffaz to keep kneading this refined, modern jazz, just edgy enough, an impetuous recipe that could have been developed ad infinitum. Instead, he did exactly the opposite. For 30 years, this trumpet player with the face of a bird has consistently taken the road against the flow, honed his skills on mountain paths, and brandished his trumpet in the face of the giants he encountered. Who else can boast such a record? Erik Truffaz threw his rhymes behind the back of composer Pierre Henry, haunted the endless nights of Christophe, repainted Enki Bilal's drawings with blue-hued notes, and shared the stage with Jacques Weber and Sandrine Bonnaire. On those nights, it seemed as though all his readings resurfaced through his mouthpiece. He recorded in India on the banks of the Ganges, sang with a Malian diva and with The Dandy Warhols, offered compositions to symphony orchestras, and wrote extensively for cinema—as if, in the end, his instrument served only one cause: extracting the buried emotion in everything that crossed his path.
He is often seen in semi-squats, invited by very young bands who see him as a commanding figure. But he is more excited than they are. More euphoric. Because this man in a hat and white shirt has never forgotten the anxiety mixed with audacity that it takes to step onto a stage. He never says too much. He leaves long spaces for others. The silence that his companions seize after Erik—that, too, is Truffaz.
A few years ago, he woke up one morning with a lump in his stomach: he had to play his mother’s favorite piece—Verdi—in a church where she was resting. He did not fail. One is not there to show doubts but to bring the house down.