A dialogue between two avant-garde figures, one poetic, the other musical.
Jean-Yves Bosseur (born 1947 in Paris) is a music composer, musicologist and writer. He studied composition at the Rheinische Musikschule in Cologne (Germany) with Karlheinz Stockhausen and
Henri Pousseur, and graduated with a PhD in Philosophy of Art at University of Paris I. Director of Research at C.N.R.S and Professor of musical Composition at the CNR of Bordeaux, he received awards from Fondation Royaumont (France) and Gaudeamus Foundation (Netherlands).
Since the early 1960s, Julien Blaine (born 1942 in Rognac, France, lives and works in Marseille) has been developing a semiotic
poetry, which can be defined as post-
concrete and post-
fluxus. Above all, his poetry is a physical experience: a
performance.
Joëlle Léandre (born 1951 in Aix-en-Provence) is a French double bass player, improviser and composer. One of the major figures of the European new music, her influence is international. Her activities as a creator and performer, both as a soloist and as part of an ensemble, have taken her to the most prestigious European, American and Asian stages. She has worked with Merce Cuningham,
Morton Feldman,
John Cage,
Giacinto Scelsi, Philippe Fénelon, Philippe Hersant,
Steve Lacy, José Luis Campana, Betsy Jolas,
Aldo Clementi...