Jean-Jacques Perrey
Jean-Jacques Perrey | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Jean Marcel Leroy |
Born | Amiens, France | 20 January 1929
Died | 4 November 2016 (aged 87) Lausanne, Switzerland |
Genres | |
Occupation(s) |
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Instruments |
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Years active | 1951–2014 |
Labels | MusiCues (1962) Vanguard (1966-1970) Pickwick (1969) Montparnasse 2000 (1971-1980) Oglio Records (2006-2008) Lo Recordings (2007) |
Associated acts | |
Website | Jean-JacquesPerry.com |
Jean Marcel Leroy (French: [pɛʁɛ]; 20 January 1929 – 4 November 2016), popularly known as Jean-Jacques Perrey, was a French electronic music performer, composer, producer, and promoter. He is considered a pioneer of pop electronica.[1] Perrey partnered with composer-performer Gershon Kingsley to form the electronic music duo Perrey and Kingsley, who issued some of the first commercial recordings featuring the Moog synthesizer. Perrey was also one of the first to promote, perform, and record with the Ondioline.
Biography[]
Early life[]
Jean Marcel Leroy was born in Amiens,[2] in the north of France.[3] He was given his first instrument, an accordion, at age 4 on Christmas Eve, 1933.[4] He learned to play piano,[5] and studied music at a conservatory for two months,[6] during which he and several classmates formed a jazz band, which performed at the school and at public venues. However, the school's director warned the students that they could either "continue playing jazz or continue your studies".[5] Perrey was expelled from the conservatory for violating a prohibition against students performing in public;[6] he later graduated from the Lycée d'Amiens. He studied medicine in Paris for four years, and planned to pursue scientific research.[4] He was an avid reader of science fiction, in particular the works of Isaac Asimov, Aldous Huxley, Arthur C. Clarke, and Ray Bradbury,[6] and took occasional work as an accordionist.[7]
Start of music career[]
In 1950,[8] while enrolled in medical school, Perrey heard inventor Georges Jenny playing and promoting his homemade Ondioline on a French radio show.[9] "With the audacity of youth [Perrey] phoned the radio station and requested Georges Jenny's telephone number, which he was duly given," wrote music historian Mark Brend. "Perrey then phoned Jenny himself, saying he liked the sound of the Ondioline but couldn't afford to buy one."[10] Perrey offered to promote the instrument if Jenny would give him one for free. After a visit to the inventor's workshop, Perrey was loaned an Ondioline. For six months Perrey practiced playing the Ondioline with his right hand while simultaneously playing piano with his left. Jenny was so impressed with Perrey's proficiency, he offered him a job as a salesman and product demonstrator. After earning substantial commissions on sales made during a trip to Sweden (during which he performed on TV), Perrey quit medical school and devoted his career to electronic music.
In late 1950, singer/composer Charles Trenet saw Perrey performing on French television. He was so impressed with the Ondioline[11] that he invited Perrey to the recording session for the song "L'Âme des poètes" ("The Soul of Poets").[10] (At a second session, Perrey played Ondioline on three more Trenet songs; the guitarist on two of those later tracks was Django Reinhardt).[8] "L'Âme des poètes" became an international commercial success, and Perrey was asked to accompany Trenet on stage.[12] "My collaboration with [Trenet] lasted a year," said Perrey, "during which I was able to meet other great artists and singers such as Yves Montand and Jacques Brel. I made my debut on radio and French television, not only as an accompanist of great singing stars, but also performing my own musical act."[4] Perrey began to travel extensively, first in France and then abroad to attend international music fairs. Eventually he developed a cabaret act, "Around the World in 80 Ways", which was a showcase for the Ondioline's versatility. Perrey explained:
Thanks to the Ondioline, I could imitate instruments from around the world, such as bagpipes from Scotland, American banjo, Gypsy violin, soprano voice, Indian sitar, and so on. I made a world tour in music and finished it with a gag of whistling a tune. At the end, the whistling was still going on (thanks to the Ondioline), but I was drinking a glass of water. We all laughed.[8]
Perrey's first commercially released recording under his own name was Prelude au Sommeil (Prelude to Sleep), issued in 1958,[13] which was described by the artist as an "auditory recipe" to induce sleep in insomniacs.[4] "I had the good fortune of meeting scientists who were interested in the possibilities of using electronic sound for psycho-medical purposes," Perrey later recalled. "Together we had the idea of creating sound complexes to induce calm in disturbed, agitated people. We created a team of researchers: acousticians, medical doctors, physicists, psychiatrists, a total of nine in all. I was the catalyzer, the musician. We spent many hours making experiments to determine which sounds would induce a state of serenity and calm."[8] In 2009 Gilles Weinzaepflen produced a documentary about the recording.[14][15]
In 1959 Perrey performed on a 10" LP entitled Cadmus, Le Robot de l'Espace, a children's record issued on the Philips label; Perrey played Ondioline and provided sound effects.[16] That same year, composer Paul Durand hired Perrey to provide Ondioline accompaniment for the main theme of the French-Italian tragi-comedic film La Vache et le Prisonnier (The Cow and the Prisoner), which starred French actor-singer Fernandel.[17]
At the Studio of Contemporary Music Research in France, Perrey met Pierre Schaeffer, who had pioneered the avant-garde sound art form known as musique concrète. Thereafter, Perrey began to experiment with tape manipulation.[18] Around this time he performed at the Olympia Theater in Paris accompanying France's most acclaimed chanteuse, Edith Piaf, who became an enthusiastic proponent of Perrey's musical gifts.[19] The association with Piaf, Perrey later wrote, proved pivotal in advancing his career.[4]
Edith herself was very impressed by the immense possibilities of the Ondioline. From her, I learned many “tricks of the trade” having to do with show business and song arrangement. She gave me money to buy studio time, which allowed me to record a few pieces on magnetic tape which were a showcase for the Ondioline. She even decided herself which pieces I should record to obtain maximum effect. She was impeccable – very demanding. When she had decided that the tape was “almost perfect,” she told me, “Now you must mail this to a person I’m going to give you the name and address for in New York. I will write him as well, to let him know of your forthcoming correspondence. You’ll see; he will answer you.” It was impossible to debate with Edith; one always had to do as she decreed! Three weeks later, I received an envelope from America. There was no note enclosed – only a round-trip plane ticket with an open return date, plus one word written in big felt-tip pen on the envelope: “COME!” Thus began the fairy tale.[4]
The man to whom Perrey had sent the tape was instrument contractor Carroll Bratman, the well-connected proprietor of Carroll Music.[20]
Relocation to New York[]
In March 1960, Perrey relocated to New York[21] under the mentorship of Bratman, who sponsored Perrey's green card, paid Perrey's living expenses at the Bristol Hotel on West 48th Street, got him registered with the musicians' union, paid him a salary, and landed him appearances performing the Ondioline on television. Bratman built Perrey an experimental laboratory and recording studio, with state-of-the-art tape recorders, and accorded him free use of any instruments in the Carroll Music collection.[12][20]
Perrey made his U.S. television debut on Tonight Starring Jack Paar; he also appeared on The Garry Moore Show, I've Got a Secret, and Captain Kangaroo.[12] Perrey composed jingles for radio and television,[22] sometimes in partnership with and Angelo Badalementi (working under the name "Andy Badale").[12] In 1960 he released a four-song EP entitled Mr. Ondioline, on the Pacific label.[23] (Perrey was not identified as the performer and in the cover photo he is masked in a black hood.)[24]
In 1962 Perrey issued the LP Musique Electronique Du Cosmos (Electronic Music from Outer Space) on the MusiCues label; the album was recorded in France and manufactured in the US. The 15 short tracks (most under two minutes long and composed by Perrey) were intended for television and radio background use. Less than 500 copies were reportedly pressed.[16]
Perrey & Kingsley and the Moog Synthesizer[]
Perrey was introduced to German-American composer/musician Gershon Kingsley in 1965 at Carroll Music.[25] As a duo, Perrey and Kingsley recorded two albums for the Vanguard label: The In Sound From Way Out! (1966), for which Perrey played Ondioline and provided musique concrète "rhythmic patterns"[8], and Kaleidoscopic Vibrations (1967), on which the duo played mostly Moog synthesizers, with added special effects.[8][26] Some tracks by Perrey and Kingsley were licensed for radio and television commercials.[21] In 1968, "The Savers", from Kaleidoscopic Vibrations, won a Clio Award when it was used as the soundtrack for a No-Cal diet soft drink commercial.[8][18]
After splitting from Kingsley, Perrey continued featuring the Moog on many of his subsequent solo records, most of which incorporated the name "Moog" in album titles: The Happy Moog (1969, with Harry Breuer), Moog Indigo (1970), Moog Sensations (1971, credited to Pat Prilly, due to a contractual conflict), Moog Generation and Moog Expressions (both 1972, also credited to Prilly), Moog Mig Mag Moog (1974, credited to Prilly), Dynamoog (1976, with Gilbert Sigrist), and Moog is Moog (1977, credited to Prilly and Harry Breuer).[27] The Happy Moog was recorded with Harry Breuer, one of the first musicians he met when he moved to New York City.[28] Perrey played Moog synthesizer and other keyboards, while Breuer played xylophone and other percussion. Breuer was credited on the cover for "Artistic Direction," while Perrey's name, again due to a contractual conflict, was omitted.[29]
On the Moog Indigo track "Flight of the Bumblebee" (adapted from an interlude composed by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov), Perrey began with a recording of actual bees:
For this composition, I took a Nagra tape recorder to an apiary in Switzerland to record the live sounds of bees buzzing about their hive. I took these bee tapes back to New York, where my studio had a variable-speed tape recorder. Using this machine, I transposed the bee buzzes to the subdivisions of the 12-tone equal-tempered scale and rerecorded them on another tape machine. Then, using manual splicing techniques, I edited the melody for one verse. Just this part took 52 hours of splicing work. People told me that I was crazy, but I told them to listen to the result! We added an accompaniment to the melody, recreating the "Flight of the Bumblebee" played by living bees.[8]
Return to Europe (1970—2000)[]
After a decade in the United States, Perrey moved back to France in 1970, ostensibly for family reasons.[25] He was named musical director of a ballet company,[30] while continuing to explore therapeutic sounds to treat insomnia.[31] He embarked on a project to record with dolphins in Vancouver, Canada,[23] and recorded music for commercials and animated television shows. He continued showcasing the Moog with a series of production music albums on various labels, including Montparnasse 2000 and Mondiophone.[19]
In 1995, Perrey began working occasionally with electropop musician/composer David Chazam; their collaborative album, Eclektronics, was issued on the Basetonic label in 1998. A collection of previously unreleased collaborative works, ELA,[32] recorded over a number of years and at various locations,[32] was independently issued by Chazam in May 2015; it was the final album of new Perrey material released during his lifetime.[27]
In 1997 Perrey collaborated with the band Air on the tracks "Remember" (on the album Moon Safari) and "Cosmic Bird" (on the various artists compilation Source Lab 3 Y).[33] The following year he performed at the Klinkende Munt festival in Brussels, Belgium, with David Chazam.[34] Over the following decade, Perrey appeared at festivals in Brighton (UK); Paris; Nantes (France); Den Haag (Netherlands); Boulogne; St. Petersburg (Russia), and Lausanne (Switzerland).[citation needed]
In 1999 he composed and recorded "The Groovy Leprechauns" for a thematic compilation album At Home with the Groovebox, issued on the Beastie Boys' Grand Royal label.[35] (In 1995 the Beastie Boys had issued an album entitled The In Sound From Way Out! that was an obvious homage to Perrey and Kingsley.)[36]
Later years (2000—2016)[]
In 2001 Vanguard Records released a compilation titled The Out Sound From Way In! that collected four of the early albums Perrey and Kingsley had recorded for the label (two as a duo, and two solo releases by Perrey). The package included seven remixes, including Fatboy Slim's reworking of the Perrey song "E.V.A." and five remixes by Eurotrash.[37]
In 2003, MediaDreams Productions produced a documentary titled Jean-Jacques Perrey: Extraterrestrial Musician, which was presented at MIPCOM in 2003.[38]
With Luke Vibert Perrey recorded an album titled Moog Acid, which was released in 2007. AllMusic reviewer John Bush observed that Perrey "uncannily conjures the rather eerie ghosts of musique concrète's past, while Vibert anchors them with expert productions. ... The tracks are ... the 21st century equivalent of Perrey-Kingsley's vision of lock-solid arrangements accompanied by the far-out sound of the Moog as a lead voice."[39]
Perrey and Dana Countryman released the collaborative album Destination Space in 2008; AllMusic reviewer William Ruhlmann wrote that "this is not an album to be taken seriously, but it is one to enjoy."[40] Countryman also wrote a biography of Perrey titled Passport to the Future, which was published in 2010 through CreateSpace.[27]
In 2010, Belgian-Australian musician Wally (Gotye) De Backer composed and recorded a song inspired by Perrey's work, then contacted Perrey to share the track for review. At the time, Perrey was 80 and living in Lausanne, Switzerland. "To my great joy, Jean-Jacques and his daughter, Patricia, both responded really warmly and said it was really sweet that a young musician would be inspired by his work but also respond to it in that way by writing a piece like that, and they invited me to visit,” said De Backer. “To me, it was incredible as a fan and long time listener just to meet the wonderful old man who had a lot of great stories and a wink in his eye, who made time for me to come and chat about the aspects of his work that I was really interested in."[41] Over the next few years, De Backer visited regularly and began helping the aging musician catalog and preserve his legacy.[42] De Backer also began purchasing existing Ondiolines, undertaking their restoration (with technical help from Stephen Masucci),[43] and learning how to play the instrument.[44]
Eventually, after a number of Ondiolines had been reconstructed, De Backer formed the Ondioline Orchestra, consisting of two Ondiolines (played by De Backer and Rob Schwimmer), Moog, Theremin, clarinet, guitar, bass, drums, and sampling devices. The ensemble's debut was scheduled for November 22, 2016, at National Sawdust, in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, with Perrey invited to attend. However, his health declined, and he could not travel.[42] Two and a half weeks before the performance, Perrey died of lung cancer at the age of 87.[45][46][47] His daughter Patricia Leroy attended the performance honoring her late father.
De Backer and the Ondioline Orchestra have staged several performances of Gotye Presents a Tribute to Jean-Jacques Perrey: at the Sydney Festival (January 16–17, 2017); at the Melbourne Recital Centre (January 20, 2017)[42]; and at the opening night of Roulette's Mixology Festival (February 3, 2018), in Brooklyn.[48] The Sydney concert won a Helpmann Award in the Contemporary Music category.[49]
De Backer launched a record label, Forgotten Futures, whose first release was Jean-Jacques Perrey et son Ondioline,[50] a compilation album featuring rare and unreleased tracks with Perrey on the Ondioline.[51] The album was released on vinyl in May 2017.
Discography[]
Studio albums[]
- 1958: Prelude au Sommeil (Institut Dormiphone)
- 1959: Cadmus, Le Robot de l'Espace (with Henri Gruel) (Philips)
- 1962: Musique Electronique Du Cosmos (Electronic Music From Outer Space) (MusiCues)
- 1966: The In Sound From Way Out! (with Gershon Kingsley) (Vanguard)
- 1967: Kaleidoscopic Vibrations: Electronic Pop Music From Way Out (with Gershon Kingsley) (Vanguard)
- 1968: The Amazing New Electronic Pop Sound of Jean Jacques Perrey (Vanguard)
- 1968: Electronic Music
- 1969: The Happy Moog (with Harry Breuer) (Pickwick)
- 1969: Switched On Santa (as engineer from recording and mixing; with Sy Mann) (Pickwick)
- 1970: Moog Indigo (Vanguard)
- 1971: Moog Sensations (Editions Montparnasse 2000)
- 1972: Moog Expressions (Editions Montparnasse 2000)
- 1972: Moog Generation (Editions Montparnasse 2000/Zero International Records)
- 1974: Moog Mig Mag Moog (Editions Montparnasse 2000)
- 1976: Dynamoog (with Gilbert Sigrist) (Mondiophone/Crea Sound Ltd)
- 1977: Moog is Moog (with Harry Breuer) (Editions Montparnasse 2000)
- 1980: Kartoonery (with Daniel Longuein and Guy Boyer) (Editions Montparnasse 2000)
- 1982: Energize with Exercise (with Bette and Ione Darrel) (Black & White)
- 1998: Eclektronics (with David Chazam) (Basetonic)
- 2000: Circus Of Life (with Gilbert Sigrist and O.C. Banks) (Koka Media)
- 2006: The Happy Electropop Music Machine (with Dana Countryman) (Olgio)
- 2007: Moog Acid (with Luke Vibert) (Lo Recordings)
- 2008: Destination Space (with Dana Countryman) (Oglio)
- 2010: Froots (with Cosmic Pocket) (In-Vitro Records)
- 2015: ELA (with David Chazam) (Freaksville)
Compilations[]
- 1973: The Best Of The Moog (Vanguard)
- 1975: Incredible Synthesizer (Vanguard)
- 1975: The Essential Perrey & Kingsley (Vanguard)
- 2000: Good Moog: Astral Animations and Komputer Kartoons (Kosinus)
- 2001: The Out Sound From Way In! The Complete Vanguard Recordings (Vanguard)
- 2007: Vanguard Visionaries: Perrey & Kingsley (Vanguard)
- 2012: The Electronic Pop Songs (Welk Music Group)
- 2012: Space Age Computer Music (Welk Music Group)
- 2017: Jean-Jacques Perrey Et son Ondioline (Forgotten Futures)
- 2019: Past Future Sound Tracks
Soundtracks[]
- 1959: Les Folles Aventures d'omer et de Jacques Courtois: Omer en Synovie (Polydor)
- 1971: (Riviera)
- 2006: Moog (with The Moog Cookbook) (Oglio)
In popular culture[]
- The last track "Chicken on the Rocks" of the studio album "Musique Electronique Du Cosmos (Electronic Music From Outer Space)" was used for a 1960s commercials from Ideal Toy Company.[52]
- "The Minuet of the Robots" was used in a Big Bird segment (character of Sesame Street) from TV series The Ed Sullivan Show,[53] being broadcast on December 14, 1969.[54]
- "March of the Martians" written by , Gary Carol and Pat Prilly[55] was the opening theme of the program "Hilarious House of Frightenstein".[56]
- "The Elephant Never Forgets" was used as main theme of the Canadian program The Buck Shot Show.[57]
- "Baroque Hoedown", a track composed together with Kingsley[58] from 1967 album Kaleidoscopic Vibrations: Electronic Pop Music From Way Out!, became quite well known by being used as theme of Main Street Electrical Parade and others Disney's parks,[3] however Perrey didn't realize it until 1980:[59]
In the 1970s, Walt Disney Productions chose this tune to be the theme for the Electrical Parade. It was extraordinary, I didn't know about it because the publishers said nothing to me. It was by chance, in 1980, that I went there and was so surprised to hear Baroque Hoedown arranged for a full orchestra.
— Jean-Jacques Perrey
- Two pieces by Perrey were used as themes principal for television comedy shows created and starring by Mexican comedian "Chespirito" (Roberto Gómez Bolaños): "The Elephant Never Forgets", composed by Perrey, Breuer and Gary Carol[60] was used as the main theme for El Chavo,[61][62][63][64] and "Baroque Hoedown" as the closing theme for El Chapulín Colorado,[60][65][66] written by Perrey together with Kingsley.[67] In 2009 Perrey along with his former collaborator Kingsley filed a lawsuit against the Televisa company for improper use of their music. The case was eventually settled and consequently, Perrey's credit is now prominently mentioned on any promotional materials of El Chavo del Ocho.[68]
- In 1973, a version of "Passport to the Future" by Instrumental Rock band The Ventures peaked at #38 on the Adult Contemporary by Billboard for 2 weeks of July 1973.[69]
- The second track "E.V.A." composed by Perrey, Badale and Marie Perreault from album Moog Indigo (1970),[70] became one of the most sampled themes in the history of Hip hop and Rap music,[71] and some of these samples were made by A Tribe Called Quest, Gang Starr and Pusha T.[27] In 1997 the musician Fatboy Slim made a remix of the track,[72][73] and in 2002 Lighting Head made a "E.V.A." version for the album "Studio Don".[74]
- In 2010, Perrey's song "Chicken on the Rocks" was used in season 14 episode 3 of the TV Series South Park, "Medicinal Fried Chicken." The song played as Randy Marsh bounced on their testicles while consuming medicinal marijuana.[75] In that same year, the song "Brazilian Flower" was also used for a soccer commercial[76] and on the other hand his music appeared in The Simpsons.[47]
- The Perrey music was used in a series of 3 shorts by David Lewandowsky: the first short titled "Going to the store" used the song "The Little Ships",[77][78][79] the second short "Late for Meeting" used the song "The Mexican Cactus",[80][81] and the last short called "Time for Sushi" used the song Dynamoog together with Gilbert Sigrist.[82][83]
- In 2018 Luke Vibert released a Extended Play "Turn" what includes a tribute song to Perrey.[84][85]
See also[]
- Gershon Kingsley
- Georges Jenny
- Ondioline
- Baroque Hoedown
- Moog Indigo
- Moog synthesizer
- Perrey and Kingsley
References[]
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- ^ "Muere Jean-Jacques Perrey, creador del tema de "El Chavo del 8"". El Universal (in Spanish). 6 November 2016. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
- ^ "Murió Jean-Jacques Perrey, el precursor de la música electrónica". El Universo (in Spanish). 7 November 2016. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
- ^ "Chespirito: ¿qué relación tienen El Chavo del Ocho y Beethoven". RPP Noticias (in Spanish). 28 November 2014. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
- ^ "El Chavo del Ocho: Curiosidades". Europapress (in Spanish). Retrieved 30 January 2021.
- ^ Frajman, Eduardo (17 March 2017) Jean-Jacques Perrey: He Helped Shape the Latin American Imagination, and Didn't Even Know It!. LemonWire. Retrieved 22 December 2021
- ^ "The Ventures". Billboard. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
- ^ "Moog Indigo - Jean-Jacques Perrey | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
- ^ "Musical spelunking #2: The Moog Modular". Compulsion Games. Archived from the original on 9 September 2021. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
- ^ Taylor, Timothy Dean (2001). Strange Sounds: Music, Technology and Culture. Psychology Press. p. 228. ISBN 9780415936842. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
- ^ Lamm, Olivier (6 November 2016). "Jean-Jacques Perrey, Robin des bois du son électronique". Libération (in French). Retrieved 11 March 2021.
- ^ "Studio Don". Tru-Thoughts. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
- ^ "House on the Rocks". Matrixsynth. 8 August 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
- ^ "Football Commercial, using Jean-Jacques Perrey tune!". Matrixsynth. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- ^ "going to the store". PetitPetitGamin. 3 September 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2021.
- ^ "Going to the Store". Know Your Meme. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
- ^ Emami, Gazelle (5 September 2011). "Bizarre Short Film Entrances Hundreds Of Thousands On YouTube". HuffPost. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
- ^ Amidi, Amid (25 October 2013). ""Late for Meeting" by David Lewandowsky". Cartoon Brew. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Get Trapped in the Machine at Industry City this Saturday". Rooftop Films Blog. 5 June 2014. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
- ^ Amidi, Amid (7 July 2017). "'Time for Sushi' by David Lewandowski". Cartoon Brew. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Dynamoog – Jean-Jacques Perrey & Gilbert Sigrist". Synthtopia. 24 June 2017. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
- ^ "Un nuevo EP de Luke Vibert sirve para relanzar el sello People Of Rhythm". Clubbing Spain (in Spanish). Retrieved 15 April 2021.
- ^ Visnovský, P.; Valentík, M (5 May 2018). "Luke Vibert to release new EP, Turn, on relaunched US label People Of Rhythm". Ra. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jean-Jacques Perrey. |
- 1929 births
- 2016 deaths
- Deaths from cancer in Switzerland
- Deaths from lung cancer
- Electroacoustic music composers
- French composers
- French male composers
- French electronic musicians
- Electronic musicians
- French keyboardists
- French experimental musicians