Musique pour Supermarché (partially lost Jean-Michel Jarre album; 1983): Difference between revisions
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In 1983, an electronic musician named Jean-Michel Jarre was asked to compose some music for an art | In 1983, an electronic musician named Jean-Michel Jarre was asked to compose some music for an art exhibition based on supermarkets. He agreed and thus created Music for Supermarkets in 1983.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musique_pour_Supermarch%C3%A9 Wikipedia Article] Retrieved 7 Nov '16.</ref> Only one copy of the album was made, which was auctioned after the art exhibition had ended. To make sure that no other copies of the album would be made the master tapes and plates were burned in front of the attendees. <ref>[http://jeanmicheljarre.com/music/music-for-supermarkets Official Website] Retrieved 7 Nov '16</ref> The reason behind this was that Jarre thought that music is art, and like paintings, it should be treated as such. <ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7R0Rfj3RsLs] Retrieved 7 Nov '16</ref> | ||
The current owner and their location are both unknown as of the time of writing this. | The current owner and their location are both unknown as of the time of writing this. |
Revision as of 22:35, 15 February 2017
This article has been tagged as Needing work due to its lack of content, clarity and organization. |
In 1983, an electronic musician named Jean-Michel Jarre was asked to compose some music for an art exhibition based on supermarkets. He agreed and thus created Music for Supermarkets in 1983.[1] Only one copy of the album was made, which was auctioned after the art exhibition had ended. To make sure that no other copies of the album would be made the master tapes and plates were burned in front of the attendees. [2] The reason behind this was that Jarre thought that music is art, and like paintings, it should be treated as such. [3]
The current owner and their location are both unknown as of the time of writing this.
Bootleg Recordings
Before the auction, however, Jarre decided to broadcast the audio via radio, so anyone could listen to it or create bootleg copies of it. However, the station he brought the record to be played in only boradcasted via AM, meaning that any recorded audio was in very low quality.
Tracks used in later albums
The following tracks were recycled in later albums:
"Music for Supermarkets, Pt. 5" and "Music for Supermarkets, Pt. 7" became "Blah Blah Café" and "Diva", respectively, and were used on Zoolook in 1984
"Music for Supermarkets, Pt. 3" became "Cinquième Rendez-Vous/Fifth Rendez-Vous" from the album Rendez-Vous in 1986[4]
References
- ↑ Wikipedia Article Retrieved 7 Nov '16.
- ↑ Official Website Retrieved 7 Nov '16
- ↑ [1] Retrieved 7 Nov '16
- ↑ [2] Retrieved 7 Nov '16.