Marcel Frémiot

Marcel Frémiot (29 February 1920 in the 8th arrondissement of Paris – 19 January 2018)[1] was a French composer and musicologist.[2]

Biography

Frémiot was a student at the conservatoire de Paris and a pupil of René Leibowitz. He was introduced to musicology by Vladimir Fedoroff.

He was artistic director or sound recordist in several record companies (Le Chant du Monde, Harmonia Mundi, disques Jéricho). From 1966, he was a professor of music history at the Marseille conservatory. In 1967–1968, he was a trainee of the Groupe de recherches musicales (GRM) under the direction of Pierre Schaeffer.

In 1968, he was the professor of the first class of electroacoustic music at the Marseille conservatory, created on the initiative of its director Pierre Barbizet. In 1970, he founded the "Groupe de musique expérimentale de Marseille" (GMEM).[3] In 1984, he created the Laboratoire Musique et informatique de Marseille (MIM).[4]

Publications

Frémiot wrote about 120 works of instrumental music, electroacoustic, vocal, choral, incidental music or film.

He wrote numerous articles in the Encyclopédie de la Musique (Fasquelle), Twenty Century Music (Calder Publishing, London), the Histoire de la musique (La Pléiade), the Encyclopédie des musiques sacrées (éditions Labergerie), Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart, The New Grove Dictionary.

He is the author of numerous analyzes of works and participated in the following collective works:

  • Les Unités sémiotiques temporelles (UST), éléments nouveaux d'analyse musicale (MIM éditeur, 1996)
  • Ouïr, entendre, écouter, comprendre après Schaeffer (dir. François Delalande, Buchet/Chastel, 1999)
  • Les Unités sémiotiques temporelles (UST), nouvelles clés pour l’écoute, outil d’analyse musicale (MIM éditeur, 2003)

References

  1. "Marcel Frémiot". brahms.ircam.fr. Retrieved 2018-02-24.
  2. "Espace souvenirs de Marcel FRÉMIOT". www.dansnoscoeurs.fr (in French). Retrieved 2018-02-24.
  3. GMEM
  4. MIM
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.