Biography
Jean-Michel André Jarre (born 24 August 1948, Lyon) is a French composer, performer and music producer. He is regarded as a pioneer in the electronic, synthpop and New Age genres, as well as an organiser of outdoor spectacles of his music which feature lights, laser displays and fireworks including the 1997 New Guinness Book of Records entry for the biggest concert ever with 3.5 million watching at Moscow's 850th anniversary. Jarre has sold an estimated 80 million albums and singles.
Jean-Michel André Jarre (born 24 August 1948, Lyon) is a French composer, performer and music producer. He is regarded as a pioneer in the electronic, synthpop and New Age genres, as well as an organiser of outdoor spectacles of his music which feature lights, laser displays and fireworks including the 1997 New Guinness Book of Records entry for the biggest concert ever with 3.5 million watching at Moscow's 850th anniversary. Jarre has sold an estimated 80 million albums and singles.
Jarre was born in Lyon on August 24, 1948, the son of Maurice Jarre, a composer of film music, and France Pejot, a member of the French resistance during World War II. His grandfather, André Jarre, was one of the inventors of the first audio mixing consoles used by Radio Lyon, and he was also involved, after World War II, with one of the first portable phonographs (the Tepazz), which he gave to his grandson as a present.
In 1968, he started experimenting with tape loops, radios and other electronic devices, and in January 1969, he joined the Groupe de Recherche Musicale (GRM), under the direction of Pierre Schaeffer, the "father" of musique concrète. Here he was introduced to the first synthesizers in Europe: the EMS VCS 3 and the Moog modular synthesizer. In GRM, Jarre was taught to think about music in terms of sounds instead of notes, and this had a huge influence upon him. He also studied foreign musical styles (African, Indian, Chinese and other oriental music) from which he learned a lot. For a period of two-three months, Jarre studied with Karlheinz Stockhausen in Cologne.
In 1972, Jarre added a modified Farfisa organ and an ARP 2600 to his collection. He released several singles under aliases: 1906 - Cartolina/Helza, Jamie Jefferson - Black Bird/ Pop Corn (contrary to some reports, Jarre did not write Pop Corn, the original version was by Gershon Kingsley). One of his first successes, the song Zig Zag Dance, was released in numerous guises, under various aliases, and differing slightly each time. His first solo album Deserted Palace (Sam Fox Productions/Dreyfus Records) was released at this time.
In 1975, Jarre wrote some music and lyrics for Françoise Hardy and Gérard Lenorman. Two of these songs were later to be re-used: La belle et la bête (which later became the basis for "Rendez-vous 2"), and La mort du cygne (which eventually evolved into "Rendez-vous 3"). He also acted as director for Christophe's Olympiashow that year, which featured a flying piano.
Jarre recorded the album Rendez-Vous after being inspired by the sounds of the Elka synthesizer, which he employed on the record liberally. It also features his first heavy use of the Moog synthesizer on a studio album.
In 1986, NASA and the city of Houston asked him to do a concert to celebrate NASA's 25th anniversary and the city of Houston's 150th anniversary. During that concert, astronaut Ronald McNair was to play the saxophone part of Jarre's piece "Rendez-Vous VI" while in orbit on board the Space Shuttle Challenger. It was to have been the first piece of music recorded in space, for the album. After the Challenger disaster of January 28, 1986 which killed McNair, the piece was recorded with a different saxophonist, retitled "Ron's piece" and the album dedicated to the seven Challenger astronauts. The Houston concert entered the Guinness Book of Records for the audience of over 1.3 million. During the concert, Houston native Kirk Whalum performed Ron McNair's saxophone part on "Ron's Piece". The concert featured giant projections of photographic images and laser patterns onto the buildings of downtown Houston, including a gigantic white screen on the front face of the Texaco Heritage Plaza building, which was under construction at the time. Due to vehicles stopping on the freeway passing the concert venue the freeways had to be closed down for the duration of the concert.
Later in 1986, Jarre performed in his birth city of Lyon as part of the celebrations for Pope John Paul II's visit to the city. The Pope was in attendance and introduced the concert with a good-night blessing (a recording of which forms part of the album Cities In Concert - Houston/Lyon).
One aspect of the show was during the transportation of several large mirror balls (some 4m diameter), which Jarre had commissioned for the show to be hung from the large dockside cranes. Whilst en route to the docks, one of the lorries had lost one of the balls on the roadside. On the same night a satellite was due to enter the Earth's atmosphere from space. A member of the public reported the sighting of a sphere like spacecraft rolling on the road, and hence caused major panic as police feared it was the satellite.
During early 1991, Jarre started promotion for a concert to take place in the Pyramids of Teotihuacan, Mexico during the great solar eclipse of July 11, 1991. Some sources mention problems with several sponsors and local authorities as the reasons that halted the project.
However, in the documentary Making the Steamroller Fly included in the Oxygène Moscow , Jarre and other collaborators mention that the concert was cancelled due to the fact that one cargo ship containing a specially built, pyramidal stage and other technical equipment sunk during the trip to Mexico, making it impossible for the crew to replace it in time for the concert. Jarre says that his disappointment was such that "he could not cope with Mexican food for two years".
This time, however, the tracks would feature newer state-of-the-art synthesizers, swooshing sampled clocks (fitting the theme of the album) and contemporary rhythms driving the tempo – a style that became threaded throughout most of the work that followed. In inspiring a generation of electronic musicians with his work from the 1970s and '80s, Jarre in turn found himself drawn to the trance genre which followed him in the '90s. He enlisted several artists of that generation, including Praga Khan, to remix tracks for the B sides of the singles.
Jarre followed through the promotion of the Chronologie album with a tour, the first large scale tour Jarre had undertaken since the mini tour of China back in 1981.
The tour entitled Europe In Concert was a series of concerts on a smaller scale than that of previous one-offs, but heavily featured a backdrop of makeshift skyscrapers and also skytrackers, laser imaging, and fireworks. This took Jarre across several European cities, including Lausanne, the Mont St Michel, London, Manchester, Barcelona, Sevilla and the Versailles Palace near Paris. Jarre did one final concert in Hong Kong in 1994, unfortunately due to laws, fireworks were omitted from the show. Jarre released a double live album of Hong Kong, which featured many of the same renditions of the Europe In Concert tracks, with some reworkings of the older album versions.
On September 6, 1997, Jarre played in Moscow to celebrate the 850th anniversary of the city. The Moscow State University was used as the backdrop for a spectacular display of image projections, skytrackers and fireworks, with an audience of 3.5 million. "Jarre breathes again with Oxygène". Retrieved on 2008-05-06. This was Jarre's fourth record and entry into the Guinness record book for the largest free concert audience ever. The concert was also the same day that the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales took place. Jarre spoke of his friendship with her and requested a moment of silence and then dedicated a song in her memory called "Souvenirs" (aka "Souvenir of China").
This period around year 2000 was marked by big changes in Jarre's personal and professional life. Starting with his separation of his former wife, a dispute for unknown causes with his record label (Disques Dreyfus) and a change in his musical style.
On 31 December 1999, Jarre held a spectacular music and light show in the Egyptian desert, near Giza. The show, called The Twelve Dreams of the Sun, celebrated the new millennium and 5,000 years of civilization in Egypt. It also offered a preview of his new album, Metamorphoses. The concert —which started on New Year's Eve and followed all the way through to the dawn of the new millennium, in a 12-hour spectacular show which featured many performances from local artists and musicians— used the backdrop of the great pyramids to project images onto, but fog during the evening concert by Jarre caused the projections on the facades of the pyramids to be blocked from view. Jarre played for around two hours during the build up to the new millennium with a countdown at midnight and spectacular firework display and then returned on stage in the early morning to perform a second slot to see in the first sunrise of the new millennium.
In 2002, Jarre performed a concert called AERO at Gammel Vrå Enge wind farm, just outside Aalborg in Denmark, to a rain soaked audience of approximately 50,000. AERO, a studio-album of mostly retooled Jarre classics, was later released in 2004 in combined DVD and CD forms. The DVD featured 5.1 sound, with DTS and Dolby Digital tracks. Jarre affirmed that this was the first musical work ever conceived for 5.1 sound. The video to accompany the musical tracks was a fixed very close-up shot of Anne Parillaud's eyes reacting in real time to the music. Inside the sleeve, the album also featured notes and a collection of various pictures and artwork of Jarre's fans from around the world.
Many observe that many of the tracks from the Aero concert, along with the concert in China that followed in 2004, sound no different from the Aero album. It could be stated that from 2002 onwards Jarre’s concerts became more of a ‘show’ than a ‘live’ concert.
On August 26, 2005, Jarre performed a long-form concert called Space of Freedom in Gdańsk, Poland to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Solidarity. Around 170,000 people attended the paid-entry concert. Lech Wałęsa was present on stage.
In September, 2006 Tadlow Music released a special symphonic album, titled "The Symphonic Jean Michel Jarre" with 20 cover versions of Jarre tracks on 2 CDs. Jarre has supported this album, including his voice on one track. There is also a special limited 3-disc set with a bonus DVD containing 5.1 surround mixes of all the tracks.
Jarre released a new original studio album, being his first real studio album since "Metamorphoses". This new studio album, entitled "Téo & Téa", was released by Warner Bros. Records and iTunes on March 26 2007. Jarre has stated that this album comes after a dark period in his private and professional life.
During 2006, Jarre was stated to produce an experimental TV series titled Mort-Mouvance, directed by Ellibert Mozart Fuzzkhan, who also produced a fake website of AeroProd, the company which produces Jarre's projects. The TV series and web sites turned out to be a hoax, and Jarre is pressing legal charges against the owners of those sites.
In August 2007, Jarre switched record companies again, this time signing with EMI France. He released an anniversary package containing a special live recording of his classic work, Oxygène, in 3D DVD, live CD and normal 2D DVD formats in November 2007, named Oxygene: New Master Recording. This is a first in Jarre's career, as it was played totally live, without tape or harddisk playback, by Francis Rimbert, Claude Samard, Dominique Perrier and Jarre himself. Jarre has gone on to state he plans on integrating the original analog synthesizers from Oxygene for his next album and is building a new private recording studio on the outskirts of Paris.
Meanwhile, Jarre's former record company, Disques Dreyfus, has released another package, containing the original versions of Oxygene and Oxygene 7-13, plus a recopilatory of "unreleased" remixes of tracks from Oxygene 7-13.
Jarre performed 10 concerts (Oxygene Live) in Paris, from December 12th 2007 to December 26th 2007. The concerts took place inside the Theatre Marigny, a small, 1000 seats theatre located in the Champs-Élysées. Later in 2008, Jarre performed several concerts to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Oxygene in theaters in Europe (see main article). After the Royal Albert Hall concert, Jarre met Brian May, who proposed he create a concert in Tenerife for the International Year of Astronomy.
An Israeli Internet Paper confirmed that a previously planned Large Outdoor Concert to take place this Summer in Jerusalem to celebrate the 60th Anniversary of Israel has now been officially cancelled.
The Oxygene IV piece has been used as part of the soundtrack for the popular videogame Grand Theft Auto 4.
In 2008, The Mail on Sunday newspaper distributed more than 2 million copies of the Oxygene 30th Anniversary CD to its readers in the United Kingdom. Francis Dreyfus Music is starting legal actions against The Mail on Sunday and EMI, as FDM claims the CD does not come from a new re-recorded master, but from the original master the French label owns the rights to.
Jarre toured again during 2009 in smaller venues than his usual large-scale events, and has been selected as artistic director for the "World Sky Race".Currently he has no contract with any major record company.
Personal life
Jarre was married to Flore Guillard from 20 January 1975 until 1977. Later he was married to British actress and photographer Charlotte Rampling from 7 October 1978 until 1997, after Jarre had an affair with the then 31-year-old secretary Odile Froment. In 2002 he became publicly engaged to French actress Isabelle Adjani, but later she ended this relationship. On 12 May 2005 he married French actress Anne Parillaud.
Jarre has three children:
Barnaby Southcombe. Son of Charlotte Rampling and Brian Southcombe (previous marriage). Barnaby was born in September 1972. Barnaby is not Jean Michel's son but has often been listed as his step-son.
Awards and recognition
1976 - Grand Prix du Disque by L'Académie Charles Cros, for Oxygene. 1976 - "Personality of The Year" by People magazine (U.S.).
1979 - Guinness Book of Records entry for the biggest concert ever (La Concorde).
1981 - Honorary member of the Beijing Conservatory of Music.
1984 - Grand Prix du Disque by L'Académie Charles Cros, for Zoolook.
1985 - Instrumental album of the year, at the Victoires de la Musique in France, for Zoolook.
1986 - Instrumental album of the year, at the Victoires de la Musique, for Rendez-vous.
1986 - Musical spectacle of the year, at the Victoires de la Musique, for the Rendez-Vous Houston concert.
1987 - New Guinness Book of Records entry for the biggest concert ever (Rendez-Vous Houston).
1987 - "European musician Person of the Year" by People magazine.
1990 - New Guinness Book of Records entry for the biggest concert ever (Paris La Defense: A City in Concert).
1993 - UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador.
1994 - Awarded Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur from the French Government.
1997 - New Guinness Book of Records entry for the biggest concert ever with 3.5 million watching at Moscow's 850th anniversary.
1998 - IFPI's Platinum Europe Award.
2005 - HCA Ambassador for the Hans Christian Andersen 2005 Bicentenary Festival.
2006 - Polish Television Academy's "Super Wiktor" award for "Space of Freedom".
2006 - Gdańsk's Man Of The Year 2005 Award.
2007 - Eska Music Awards Special Award.
2008 - Doctor Honoris Causa by the Russian Academy of Sciences.
An asteroid, 4422 Jarre, has been named in honor of him.
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