Tamia Valmont


Tamia Valmont also known as Tamia, is a French composer and singer.

Biography

Tamia Valmont made her stage debut at the Châteauvallon Jazz Festival with Michel Portal, in France, in 1972. She took then part of various musical trends: improvised music, contemporary music, theater, and discovered affinity with extra-European music.
She was commissioned in 1980 to perform solo at the Paris Festival d'Automne. On this occasion, she started using recording her voice successively on a multi-track tape to create what she called a "solo polyphony", a genre she would keep exploring in her career. In 1979 Tom Johnson wrote an article about her in the Village Voice that lead to her first USA tour. In 1990 she was invited to perform in Japan by composer Toru Takemitsu at the Tokyo Festival.
She collaborated with artists such as Pierre Favre with whom she recorded 3 CDs. In 2009, the writer Nancy Huston cited Tamia Valmont as her inspiration for the main character of her novel entitled Fault Lines.
She started teaching vocal technique and improvisation in 1973. She is currently teaching to professional singers and actors in Paris.

Discography

Solo Albums
Collaborations with Pierre Favre