Janine Charbonnier
Janine Charbonnier (born 8 June 1926) is a French pianist, composer and pioneer in composer-generated music. She was born in Paris, and married writer Georges Charbonnier.[1]
With Pierre Barbaud and Roger Blanchard, she co-founded the Groupe de Musique Algorithmique de Paris (GMAP). With the assistance of Bull Centre National Computing Electronics, they produced their first concert of algorithmic music, programming in Fortran, as part of an art festival at the Rodin Museum in Paris in June 1959.[2][3]
Works
Selected works include:
- La Varsovienne, electronic, 1965 (with Roger Blanchard)
- The Warsaw, electronic, 1965 (with Pierre Barbaud)
- Circus, a theatrical musical based on a novel by Maurice Roche
- Exercice Op.3 for woodwind quartet
- Prélude, Canon, Choral for woodwind quartet
gollark: Just replace the pins with crocodile clips.
gollark: Just use aqueous immersion cooling for your overheating CPU sockets.
gollark: Oh dear.
gollark: Related: did you know that you can just *declare yourself* Pope?
gollark: Or pray to hexagons!
References
- Sadie, Julie Anne; Samuel, Rhian (1994). The Norton/Grove dictionary of women composers (Digitized online by GoogleBooks). ISBN 9780393034875. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
- "COMPOSITION DE MUSIQUE PAR L'ELECTRONIQUE". Retrieved 20 January 2011.
- Popper, Frank (1975). Art, action and participation.
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