St Germain Ludovic Navarre, The Man Who Fused Jazz and House
Who Is St Germain?
St Germain is the stage name of Ludovic Navarre, a French DJ and producer born on April 10 1969 in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, near Paris. He is one of the founding figures of the French Touch movement and the creator of a genre that did not exist before him: jazz house, the seamless fusion of house music’s rhythmic drive with jazz’s harmonic sophistication and improvisational freedom.
His third album Tourist (2000), released on the legendary Blue Note Records label, sold over four million copies worldwide and remains one of the best-selling electronic albums of all time. It sits alongside Daft Punk’s Homework and Air’s Moon Safari as a cornerstone of French electronic music’s golden era.
Ludovic Navarre convinced the most prestigious jazz label in the world, Blue Note Records, to sign an electronic music artist. Then he made an album that sold four million copies. He did not do it by compromising. He did it by making something genuinely new.
Boulevard (1995): The Album That Started Jazz House
St Germain began releasing music in the early 1990s under various aliases, experimenting with combinations of house music and jazz in his home studio in Chatou with his friend and collaborator Guy Rabiller. After years of EPs, his debut album Boulevard arrived in July 1995 on Laurent Garnier’s legendary F Communications label.
Boulevard was not the first time jazz and house had been mixed. But it was perhaps the first time the mixture felt inevitable. Navarre assembled a group of young Parisian jazz musicians, including pianist Alexandre Destrez, trumpeter Pascal Ohse, and saxophonist Edouard Labor, and built house tracks around their playing. The result was a record that cleared the path for a wave of French house music that would follow over the next five years.
Boulevard sold over one million copies worldwide. DJ Mag wrote that it was “one of those rare records that makes everything sound easy, an album that revolutionized the perception of French music and consummated the union between house and jazz.”
Tourist (2000): Four Million Copies and a Place in History
In 1999, Blue Note Records, the most celebrated jazz label in the world, did something unprecedented: they signed an electronic music producer. Ludovic Navarre had asked to be on Blue Note specifically, having grown up obsessed with the label’s roster of Miles Davis, John Coltrane, and Herbie Hancock. Blue Note’s president agreed. The result was Tourist.
Released on May 30 2000, Tourist took the formula of Boulevard and perfected it. The same cast of Parisian jazz musicians returned, this time with more room to breathe and more adventurous arrangements. “Rose Rouge” samples Marlena Shaw’s “Woman of the Ghetto” and builds it into something ecstatic. “Sure Thing” weaves Miles Davis and John Lee Hooker into a late-night house groove. “Alabama Blues” is exactly what it sounds like and more.
Tourist reached number 3 in France, number 3 in the Netherlands, number 8 in the Netherlands, and charted across Europe. It sold over four million copies worldwide, making it one of the best-selling electronic albums ever made.
“I didn’t think I was making a big album. I was just making the music I wanted to hear.”
Ludovic Navarre on Tourist, Radio-Canada interviewIn 2020, Tourist celebrated its 20th anniversary. Navarre gave a rare interview reflecting on the album’s creation and lasting impact, acknowledging that the scale of its success was something he had difficulty absorbing at the time. The album still sounds completely modern today, which is perhaps the highest compliment that can be paid to any record.
What Makes St Germain Sound Like St Germain?
St Germain’s music lives in the space between two worlds. The structural and rhythmic world of house music provides the foundation: a steady four-four groove, filtered loops, a dark and sensual atmosphere. Over this, live jazz musicians improvise and react as if they were in a club, not a recording studio.
The key is sampling as composition. Navarre builds his tracks from jazz and blues recordings, stretching and looping them until they become something else entirely while retaining the warmth and humanity of the original performance. Then he places live musicians on top to respond and interact with the samples. The boundary between electronic and live becomes impossible to locate.
His influences range widely: Bob Marley, Miles Davis, Kool and the Gang, Detroit techno, Chicago house, and traditional French music all appear in his sound. The eclecticism is disciplined by an exquisite ear for atmosphere and a patience with tempo and groove that is distinctly French.
St Germain on YouTube
Watch official St Germain videos and explore the Tourist and Boulevard catalog on YouTube.



