Jean-Michel Jarre is a true pioneer of electronic music. From his early role in electronic sound to his current work with AI, technology is at the forefront of everything he does. Having amassed an extraordinary collection of electronic and electroacoustic instruments—one of the largest and most important in the world—JMJ provides the ideal raw materials for this unique illustrated book.
Machines begins in 1913 with The Art of Noises Futurist manifesto and chronicles the genre as fundamentally European, originating with Surrealism and later shaped by the work of the Groupe de Recherches Musicales and public broadcasters, including Westdeutscher Rundfunk, Radio France, and the BBC through its Radiophonic Workshop. Detailed descriptions of more than eighty instruments—from the iconic ARP 2500 to rare, bespoke, one-off creations—illustrate shifts in electronic sound. Throughout, JMJ’s personality and devotion to the electronic cause shines through, aided by biographical anecdotes and his unparalleled depth of knowledge.
Contributors
Jean-Michel Jarre
Author
Jean-Michel Jarre is a French composer and one of the most influential figures in electronic music. His album Oxygene launched a career spanning twenty-two albums and eighty-five million sales. He is a UNESCO goodwill ambassador, was the first Western musician invited to perform in China, and has performed at locations including the Pyramids of Giza, the Sahara Desert, and London’s Docklands. Jarre holds the record for the largest concert audience (3.5 million attendees), attracted 75 million people to a 2021 virtual Notre-Dame performance, and headlined the closing ceremony of the 2024 Summer Paralympics in Paris.
