Daniel Charles


Daniel Paul Charles was a French musician, musicologist and philosopher. He was born on 27 November 1935 in Oran and died on 21 August 2008 in Antibes.

Biography

He was a student of Olivier Messiaen at the Paris Conservatory of Music, he received the aggregation in philosophy in 1959 and a PhD under the direction of Mikel Dufrenne in 1977.
After leading the Commission charged with establishing the status of professorship of music at the French Ministry of Education, he founded and lead for twenty years the Department of Music of University of Paris VIII. He was also responsible, from 1970 to 1980, for the teaching of general aesthetics at the University of Paris IV. He decided to end his career by teaching philosophy at the University of Nice Sophia-Antipolis.
When he graduated from the Paris Conservatory of Music in 1956, he participated in the GRM under the leadership of Pierre Schaeffer, and proposed to set into electronic music Stéphane Mallarmé's "Coup de dés" in Darmstadt, a project which caught the attention of Karlheinz Stockhausen. But his lack of enthusiasm toward the "solfège des bruits" of Schaeffer led him to focus instead on John Cage, whom he met in 1958. He contributed then to present Cage's music and philosophy in France: Pour les oiseaux, published first in French became a classic book. It was later published in English: For the Birds.
Daniel Charles has been invited by many universities to lecture, and has published many articles and several books, five of which have been translated into German, and two into Japanese.

Publications

Main Publications

6 special issues of Revue d'Esthétique, among them: "John Cage" Number 13-14-15 .

Articles

More than 200 articles published in several magazines, in collective books, and several encyclopedias, prefaces, LPs and CDs booklets, etc.

Translations (from English)