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Pierre-Jean Croset (born July 14, 1949 in Grenoble, France) is a composer, an interpreter, a stringed-instrument maker and a French musicologist.[1][2]

Pierre-Jean Croset
Born (1949-07-14) July 14, 1949 (age 73)
Grenoble, France
NationalityFrench
OccupationComposer, an interpreter, a stringed-instrument maker and a French musicologist

Early life


As a young boy, Pierre-Jean Croset was introduced to music theory by his mother, who taught literature and was a classical pianist. At the age of seven, he took private piano lessons with professor and composer Paul Pittion in Grenoble for six years. He also began to play the guitar at the age of thirteen. In 1969, he was the guitarist for a jazz group in Lyon.

Having earned a university degree in history and geography in 1970, he decided to specialize in musicology. He received his doctorate and graduated summa cum laude in 1991, supervised by the musicologist and philosopher Daniel Charles (Paris VIII). His thesis titled "By Going Back up Mugu Karnali, essay on the Music of Spheres" explores the relationship between music and spirituality. Fascinated by John Cage, he studied his famous "Notations" for several years.

In January 1976, he was invited by Maurice Fleuret to be part of "The Stand of the Young composers" at the Museum of Modern Art of Paris. Later he obtained a research grant from the Ministry of Culture (1982) to study the music and instruments of Bali and Central Java.

Thanks to the "Villa Medicis" "hors les murs" grant which he received in 1984, he travelled to the University of California in San Diego where he performed and lectured at the Center for Music Experiment in addition to Berkeley, Stanford, Oakland Mills College and UCLA. In 1975, he settled down in Provence where he performed in concerts for several years. During the Festival d'Avignon in 1985, he exhibited his musical instruments and performed for the Chartreuse of Villeneuve-lès-Avignon. Later he journeyed to the East to study its local instrumental productions: during 1986 in Nepal, 1987 in North India, 1988 in South India and in Indonesia during 1997 and 2002.

From 1970 till 1982, he studied a large number of western and oriental traditional instruments to establish which one corresponded best to his wants. As a proponent of a new stringed-instrument trend in improved acoustics, he decided to create his own instruments, "harmonic lyres" and guitars that delivered deeply harmonious natural sounds due to the specific choice of Savarez strings and isolation materials which do not produce interferences.

Giving free rein to his numerous musical projects and his video documentaries, he also became known for his new sound installations for gardens, and he created the association "Atelier de Création Musique et Paysage".


Career


The stringed-instrument maker, Pierre-Jean Croset, is the son of an engineer father and inventor who worked for Altulor: a company that produced synthetic materials. As a result, during his childhood, Croset discovered the properties of a kind of PMMA called "Altuglas" (diffuser of light, transparent and bright) by diverting the usage of a PMMA blowpipe.

Inspired by the John Cage quote "to create new music it is necessary to create new tools", he was directed by the researcher and acoustician Émile Leipp, director of the Laboratory of Musical Acoustic (CNRS) of the University of Jussieu, Paris. He focused on inventing a musical instrument.

In 1974, his first glass Harmonic Lyre was made with altuglas. He had the opportunity to play this instrument at the tenth Biennial event of Paris in 1977 at the Museum of Modern Art in Paris. The electroacoustic lyre had 18 strings and at least two micro-sensors for each of the strings. By 2010, he had successfully designed four harmonic lyres, 3 glass guitars of PMMA and carbon fiber neck, "water drums" for John Cage's creation with the " percussions of Strasbourg" (1989), as well as various other original instruments which include musical wind mills, wind chimes, kalimbé, musical jackstraw in bamboo for children, musical boomerangs, and an acoustic game of bowls.

In 1986, he designed a musical instrument called "Geophone" for the city of music in Paris. The following year, he created a design of a PMMA Sarod for the musician Amjad Ali Kahn.


Musicology


In 1987, having studied Nepalese, Indonesian and Hindi cultures, he met with ethnomusicologist Alain Daniélou whose works he had been studying for over fifteen years. Daniélou taught Croset the principles concerning the study of musical scales, musical semantics and the comparative table of musical intervals.

As a musicologist and musician, he is particularly interested in the effects produced by sound according to the laws of audition, coupled with physiological and mental aspects. He defines this combination as "the just intonation". This intonation is evident (it opposes "the tempered intonation") in traditional musical cultures. While in India, in particular Southern India, he collected data on the musical properties of certain Tamil Nadu temples. For this study, he was awarded the "Romain Rolland" prize by the Foreign office (France) in 1987.

Since 1991, he has studied "musical and landscape art" which includes the sound of plants and trees.


Publications



Discography



Film music



References


  1. Blanks, Fred (January 30, 1989). "Stop the show I want to get off!". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  2. "Interval". Interval, Volume 5. 1987. p. 26. Retrieved 19 June 2011.



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