Biography
When André Riotte took up his position
at the EURATOM research facility in Italy in 1961, he began to organise
a cultural life for the two thousand scientists working there, including
concerts, a record library, film club, etc.
Also in 1961, he defined the concept of "balanced
cycle" (series of pitches and cycle of intervals) for which he calculated
all the modulo-12 forms by computer. He gave a series of lectures at Ispra
and Milan on the relationships between musical composition and modern
scientific techniques.
In 1964, the San Fedele Centre in Milan organised a concert
of his chamber music, to the acclaim of the Italian critics.
He
became involved in Xenakis' CEMAMu in 1969; there he presented the computer
formalisation of a piece by Stravinsky in 1973, and a computer composition
model in 1975, applied to Transe calme (1974) for piano.
From 1978 to 1990, at Paris 8 University, first as a
lecturer and then associate lecturer, he taught mathematical formalisation
and computer processing of musical structures.
André Riotte has devoted himself entirely to music
since 1982. In 1984, he began research work the 4X computer at the Ircam
on the computer synthesis of pseudo-periodic sounds (inharmonics) with
a view to the continuous transformation of synthetic timbres. He presented
the results of this work at the International Computer Music Conference
in Paris in 1984.
In 1985-86, he took part in a computer-assisted composition
project at Ircam. The team that was assembled on this occasion became
independent in 1987, calling itself CRIME (Collectif de Recherche Instruments
Modèles Ecriture), which he chaired.
In January 1988, with Marcel Mesnage (computer scientist,
member of CRIME), he published, "a computer model of Stravinsky's
1st piece for string quartet", which was the completion of work he
had commenced some fifteen years earlier; the model renders the score
as it was written.
In February 1989, he ran a three-day course entitled
"Contemporary Languages" in Dijon, for Principals and teachers
of Music Schools in the Bourgogne Franche-Comté region.
As a Fellow of the French Society for Musical Analysis
(SFAM), of which he became vice-chairman in 1993, he took part in preparations
for the European Musical Analysis Congresses (Colmar, October 1989 - Montpellier,
February 1995) within the Programmes Committees.
In 1991, he gave presentations at a number of Conferences:
Quadrivium in Metz, the first Spanish symposium on Musical Analysis at
Oviedo, foundation of the European Society for the Cognitive Sciences
of Music - ESCOM - at Trieste, where he was appointed to the Executive
Committee.
From 1991 to 1998, he lectured at Ircam on the mathematical
formalisation of music to doctorate students in 20th century Music and
Musicology, and in the Composition and Computer Music course from 1990
to 1993.
After working on the editorial team of the review Analyse
Musicale, he became actively involved in the launch of the new review,
MUSURGIA, Analyse et pratique musicales, (published by ESKA) and in 1994
became chief editor. After 25 issues, he left the position in 2001 to
devote himself to composing.
In 2003, a grant from the Direction de la Musique gave
rise to a "tribute to the composer André Riotte":
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A first concert was devoted to the works he composed
in his youth, on the occasion of the publication of the CD "Le
Passé Simple", a collection of most of these works.
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A conference by Riotte: "My musical adventure:
from creative intuition to formalism and back", was illustrated
with musical examples played by pianist Thérèse Malengreau.
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The grant also encouraged the preparation of a
CD based on Météorite et ses Métamorphoses, to
be published late 2010.
Upon request of the du New-York Miniaturist Ensemble (NYME), he wrote
Minimales, 12 mini-pieces for 4 instruments and one percussionnist (2008).
Creation in Manhattan, 25 September 2008, by the NYME.
He finished composing Marcello, works for marimba and cello (2007) written
in memories to past team partner, Marcel Mesnage.
A first concert for string quartet Or i g ami
is planned March 2011 in Paris (salle Cortot).
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