Antoine Fafard

Antoine Fafard
OriginMontreal, Quebec, Canada
Genres
Occupations
  • Musician
  • composer
  • producer
Instruments
Years active1998–present
Websiteantoinefafard.com

Antoine Fafard is a Canadian–British jazz fusion bassist, guitarist and composer. He founded the progressive fusion group Spaced Out, which released several albums between 2000 and 2008. Since 2011, he has released a sequence of solo albums noted for their complex rhythmic structures and collaborations with drummers such as Terry Bozzio, Simon Phillips, Dave Weckl, Vinnie Colaiuta, Chad Wackerman, and Gavin Harrison.

Early life

Fafard was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.[1] He began musical training on piano at age nine and classical guitar at age eleven before switching to bass guitar in his mid-teens. He studied music at the collegiate and university levels, focusing on composition and transcription.[1]

Career

Fafard began his career as leader of the progressive fusion group Spaced Out, active during the 2000s. Since 2011 he has released a series of solo and collaborative instrumental albums recorded with jazz and progressive rock musicians.

Spaced Out (1998–2008)

Formed in 1998, Spaced Out was led by Fafard through a series of progressive fusion albums released between 2000 and 2008. The ensemble operated as an instrumental project centred on Fafard’s compositions, combining elements of jazz fusion and progressive rock across its recorded output.[2]

Solo career (2011–present)

Fafard began his solo discography with Solus Operandi (2011). A central feature of his subsequent catalogue is the composition of material tailored to the stylistic strengths of specific guest drummers.[3]

His 2013 release, Occultus Tramitis, featured contributions from Terry Bozzio, Simon Phillips, Dave Weckl, Chad Wackerman, and violinist Jerry Goodman.[4] This was followed by Ad Perpetuum (2014), which included performances by Vinnie Colaiuta and guitarist Jerry De Villiers Jr.[5]

Fafard has worked extensively with Gavin Harrison. Their first duo album, Chemical Reactions (2020), incorporated orchestral instrumentation. A follow-up, Perpetual Mutations (2024), added classical guitar, piano, and cello, and was praised in UK Jazz News for its “eclectic musical choices”.[6][7]

In 2022, Fafard launched Alta Forma, a vocal-oriented progressive rock project featuring JK Harrison and drummer Todd Sucherman.[8]

Musical style

Reviewers have described Fafard’s music as a hybrid of jazz-rock and progressive rock.[4][9] Commentators have highlighted his use of complex rhythmic structures, prominent bass lines and tightly structured compositions that still leave room for improvisation.[4][9] Pete Feenstra of Get Ready to ROCK! compared his work to that of the Mahavishnu Orchestra and Allan Holdsworth.[10] Reviews of his later albums note an expanded stylistic palette incorporating classical guitar, orchestral textures, and multi-instrumental performance.[6][9]

Critical reception

Fafard’s solo work has attracted attention from specialist music press. In 2025 Modern Drummer ran a feature on his compositional approach and collaborations with drummers such as Terry Bozzio, Vinnie Colaiuta, Chad Wackerman and Gavin Harrison.[3] Prog reviewed Quadra Spherium, describing it as a fusion of jazz-rock and progressive rock instrumentation,[11] and Modern Drummer covered the album in its “New Releases” section.[12] All About Jazz has reviewed several of his releases, including Occultus Tramitis and Ad Perpetuum,[4][5] while London Jazz News, Progressive Rock Central, UK Jazz News and Get Ready to ROCK! have reviewed albums such as Sphère, Borromean Odyssey and Perpetual Mutations.[13][9][6][10]

Discography

Solo and collaborative albums

Year Title Label Notes / Collaborators
2011 Solus Operandi Unicorn Digital Solo debut
2013 Occultus Tramitis Unicorn Digital Featuring Terry Bozzio, Jerry Goodman, and Dave Weckl
2014 Ad Perpetuum Unicorn Digital Featuring Vinnie Colaiuta
2016 Sphère Timeless Momentum Featuring Gary Husband
2017 Proto Mundi Timeless Momentum Featuring Simon Phillips and Jerry Goodman
2019 Borromean Odyssey Timeless Momentum Featuring Todd Sucherman
2020 Chemical Reactions Harmonic Heresy Duo with Gavin Harrison
2022 Spatium & Tempus Timeless Momentum As Alta Forma
2024 Perpetual Mutations Harmonic Heresy Duo with Gavin Harrison
2025 Quadra Spherium Timeless Momentum Featuring Gary Husband and Jean-Pierre Zanella
2025 Trajectory Timeless Momentum As Alta Forma

With Spaced Out

  • Spaced Out (2000)
  • Eponymus II (2001)
  • Slow Gin (2003)
  • Unstable Matter (2006)
  • Live at the Crescendo Festival (2007)
  • Evolution (2008)

References

  1. ^ a b Romero, Angel (July 19, 2013). "Interview with Jazz Fusion Sensation Antoine Fafard". Progressive Rock Central.
  2. ^ Jenkins, Todd S. (October 1, 2002). "Spaced Out: Spaced Out". All About Jazz.
  3. ^ a b Griffith, Mark (July 2025). "Bassist Antoine Fafard, Composing for the Great Modern Drummers". Modern Drummer. Vol. 49, no. 6. Griffith, Mark (June 2025). "Bassist Antoine Fafard, Composing for the Great Modern Drummers". Modern Drummer.
  4. ^ a b c d Astarita, Glenn (September 10, 2013). "Antoine Fafard: Occultus Tramitis". All About Jazz.
  5. ^ a b Astarita, Glenn (January 25, 2015). "Antoine Fafard: Ad Perpetuum". All About Jazz.
  6. ^ a b c Mallows, Rob (August 5, 2024). "Gavin Harrison & Antoine Fafard – 'Perpetual Mutations'". UK Jazz News.
  7. ^ Ewing, Jerry (21 May 2024). "Gavin Harrison teams up with Antoine Fafard for second album". Prog.
  8. ^ "Alta Forma, New Superb Progrock Band with Fusion Edge". Progressive Rock Central. September 28, 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d Romero, Angel (September 18, 2019). "The Insistent Fusion Energy of Antoine Fafard". Progressive Rock Central.
  10. ^ a b Feenstra, Pete (August 31, 2016). "Album review: Antoine Fafard – Sphere". Get Ready to ROCK!.
  11. ^ Smith, Sid (July 2025). "Review: Antoine Fafard – Quadra Spherium - Powerful jazz-rock with added sax appeal". Prog. No. 161.
  12. ^ "Quadra Spherium review". Modern Drummer. July 2025. "Quadra Spherium" (PDF). Modern Drummer. Vol. 49, no. 07. July 2025. p. 76.
  13. ^ Mallows, Rob (August 27, 2016). "CD REVIEW: Antoine Fafard – Sphère". London Jazz News.