Explore popular quotes and sayings by a French composer Luc Ferrari.
Last updated on November 9, 2024.
Luc Ferrari was a French composer of Italian heritage and a pioneer in musique concrète and electroacoustic music. He was a founding member of RTF's Groupe de Recherches Musicales (GRMC), working alongside composers such as Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henry.
So the ideology was that: use sounds as instruments, as sounds on tape, without the causality. It was no longer a clarinet or a spring or a piano, but a sound with a form, a development, a life of its own.
I wanted to play piano, and that slid quickly into writing - it wasn't enough to play other people's notes: I had to write notes too.
My sisters were going out with artists and poets, and eventually it was the creative world which attracted me.
Electronic music used pure sounds, completely calibrated. You had to think digitally, as it were, in a way that allowed you to extend serial ideas into other parameters through technology.
You turned on the radio and heard all kinds of things.
Whereas Schaeffer and Henry were working like samplers, their idea was to capture those sounds which couldn't be serially calibrated because they were too complex in character.
I probably went to musique concrete concerts - though not the very first ones - at the beginning of the 50s.
Well, first I studied piano. I wasn't very satisfied because I though my teachers were dumb... and repressive.
When the Domaine Musical started up, I wasn't part of it. They were the major players in contemporary music at that time, braodcasting old and new composers' work. And I wasn't one of them.
I think I came across Cecil Taylor a bit later, in 65 or 66. That really impressed me - Cecil Taylor is an amazing character... Both his music and the way he approaches the instrument are astonishing.
I have problems with machines which aren't gestural.
Boulez seemed to me to be a guy who wrote laws. Like a company lawyer.
I was born in Paris, and I haven't moved, except until now - I live in the suburbs and I hate it.
With the piano I'm completely in control of the gestural situation-not that I'm going to play the piece myself, but I know what's difficult, what's impossible.