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Lamont鈥檚 Remy Le Boeuf Wins Grammy for Best Instrumental Composition

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Heather Hein

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The six-time nominee and director of Jazz & Commercial Music Studies at the 91桃色 won his first Grammy for the composition 鈥淔irst Snow.鈥

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Remy Le Boeuf

Modern jazz composer Remy Le Boeuf, director of Jazz & Commercial Music Studies in the Lamont School of Music at 91桃色, took home his first Grammy Award on Feb. 1 for Best Instrumental Composition for his piece 鈥淔irst Snow.鈥 The composition appears on 鈥淪ilent Course,鈥 his album with the Nordkraft Big Band, a Danish ensemble, and vocalist Danielle Wertz.

Following the win, Le Boeuf鈥攚ho grew up making music alongside his twin brother and co-leads the jazz quintet Le Boeuf Brothers鈥攕houted out his sibling鈥檚 recent success. 鈥淚 want to shout out my twin brother, who won his first Grammy last year in the same category. Pascal, we're even now,鈥 he said. (Pianist Pascal Le Boeuf earned the award in 2025 for 鈥淪trands.鈥)听

He closed his acceptance speech by saying that his music is about building bridges between genres, countries, and musicians and listeners, and then added, 鈥淟et's keep building bridges.鈥 You can watch Le Boeuf's full acceptance speech .

The 91桃色 Newsroom first spoke with Remy Le Boeuf in 2023, shortly after he joined the Lamont faculty and received Grammy nominations for his album 鈥淎rchitecture of Storms鈥 and the composition听鈥淢innesota, WI.鈥 That story appears below.

Lamont鈥檚 Remy Le Boeuf Scores Multiple Grammy Nominations

As a saxophonist, composer, and the Lamont School of Music鈥檚 new director of Jazz & Commercial Music Studies, Remy Le Boeuf has always had 鈥渂ig ideas鈥 about music鈥攊deas that have led to a successful career as a jazz innovator and, most recently, as composer and arranger of two Grammy-nominated albums.

In mid-November, his album, 鈥淎rchitecture of Storms,鈥 was nominated for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album, and his arrangement of the song 鈥淢innesota, WI鈥 for indie rock musician Bon Iver garnered a second nomination in the category of Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella.

Called a 鈥渂ig record鈥 in terms of ambition, scale, and degree of difficulty, 鈥淎rchitecture of Storms鈥 is the second album Le Boeuf has produced with his 20-plus-person jazz orchestra. His 2019 debut album, 鈥淎ssembly of Shadows,鈥 earned Grammy nominations for Best Instrumental Composition and Best Arrangement.

Le Boeuf鈥檚 music is rooted in traditional jazz but influenced by contemporary classical and indie rock. 鈥淎rchitecture of Storms鈥 is a transitional album, demonstrating an indie rock-influence with his jazz orchestra. It鈥檚 鈥渒ind of like a bridge but also a continuation of the first album,鈥 he says, noting that both record titles have the same initials and number of syllables. 鈥淚鈥檓 kind of finishing the first statement and opening the door to where I plan on going.鈥

Before coming to Denver in August, Le Boeuf spent 18 years in New York, where he attended the Manhattan School of Music and began his professional career. He has worked with a wide range of collaborators, including the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis, Linda Oh, HAIM, JACK Quartet, Dayna Stephens, Prefuse 73, and his twin brother Pascal, with whom he co-leads the experimental jazz quintet, Le Boeuf Brothers.

Remy Le Boeuf

Growing up in Santa Cruz, California, Le Boeuf started playing the oboe when he was 10 and picked up the saxophone a year later. The first jazz album that became an obsession was Charles Mingus鈥 鈥淢ingus Ah Um.鈥 鈥淚 listened to pretty much nothing else for about a year,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 wanted to absorb it; I wanted to become that music. I wanted to listen to it as I slept and wake up being able to play everything on the saxophone鈥攜ou know, some very childlike, innocent but kind of beautiful way of seeing the world.鈥

Not long after, he started using his sister鈥檚 old karaoke machine that had a tape recorder on it, and he would plan out epic orchestral compositions. 鈥淚 never wrote them down or anything, but I had these big ideas in my head,鈥 Le Boeuf recalls. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 until many, many years later of trying to force really big, epic ideas into a small band that I realized, 鈥極h, I should just have a big band.鈥 So, when I put together my jazz orchestra, that鈥檚 when a lot of things clicked for me.鈥

Things also clicked when, around the time his second album was released, the position at Lamont opened up. He had previously worked with the Lamont faculty when he was commissioned to write a piece for the jazz orchestra a couple years earlier. 鈥淲hen I came for the interview process and met the students and faculty, I felt like it was a welcoming place, and it just felt like a wonderful community to become a part of,鈥 he says.

In addition to conducting Lamont鈥檚 jazz orchestra and working with several advanced students on saxophone and composition, he has another album coming out in 2023 with Le Boeuf Brothers. He鈥檚 also working on a saxophone book and composing several commissions for different bands, including the Air Force Falconaires. In January, he began serving as chief conductor of the Nordkraft Big Band in Denmark.

The Grammy Awards are scheduled for Feb. 5 in Los Angeles. Le Boeuf plans to be on hand for the big event.

鈥淛azz music is not very in the spotlight for the general public, so to be a musician who gets nominated for a Grammy puts you in the public eye,鈥 Le Boeuf says. 鈥淚t puts your accomplishments in a lens where people can understand the significance [of your work], even if you operate in a smaller field like I do.鈥 听听听