Space Art (band)

(Redirected from Roger Rizzitelli)

Space Art was a French electronic music duo that originally consisted of Dominique "Terracota" Perrier on keyboards and Roger "Bunny" Rizzitelli on drums. Formed in 1977, Space Art split up in 1981, after releasing three studio albums. Rizzitelli died in 2010, and two years later, Perrier released a tribute album with a number of musicians including his late wife, Janet Woollacott, under the name Dominique Perrier Project. In 2016, Perrier recruited Rizzitelli's son Tommy to play drums, and they released two further studio albums, once more under the name Space Art. Perrier died in 2023.

Space Art
Also known asDominique Perrier Project (2012)
OriginFrance
Genres
Years active1977–1981, 2012–2023
Labels
  • IF Records
  • Carrère
  • Waves Records
  • Spalax
  • C.Zen Prod
  • Deserted Island Music
Past members

History

edit

Formation: 1977

edit

In 1974, Dominique "Terracota" Perrier had been working as an arranger with Christophe, for whom Roger "Bunny" Rizzitelli had been drumming. Christophe brought an ARP Odyssey synthesizer, which was used mainly as a metronome, into the studio. He then lent the synthesizer to Perrier for two years, during which time the band was born.[1][2]

According to Perrier, he originally preferred to name the band Moon, but after a trip to a fun fair, Rizzitelli suggested an alternative. One of the fair attractions had been named after Spessart, the German mountain range. This then morphed into Space Art, which sounded better to them both.[1]

Career peak: 1977–1980

edit

The duo released three albums between 1977 and 1980,[3] selling three million units worldwide and achieving number-one status in France.[4] Space Art (1977), Trip in the Center Head (1979), and Play Back (1980) were all recorded at Studios Ferber [fr] in Paris.[1] In 1981, they supported Jean-Michel Jarre during his Concerts in China tour, thereby becoming among the first Western musicians to perform in that country during its reform era.

Space Art dissolved in 1981, and Perrier went on to co-found the pop rock group Stone Age in 1992.[5]

Death of Rizzitelli and aftermath: 2010–2023

edit

Following the death of Rizzitelli in 2010, Perrier invited a number of musicians to record a tribute album, which was released in 2012 under the Dominique Perrier Project moniker.[6] It included input from Perrier's wife, Janet Woollacott, on vocals; Lilli Lacombe on violin and vocals; Michel Valy (Stone Age) on bass; Laurent Faucheux on drums; Alain Pype on drum programming; and Patrick Rondat on guitar.[6]

Perrier kept the project going, reclaiming the name Space Art, and released a compilation album in 2016, titled On Ne Dira Rien – Best of All Times. A few years later, he recruited Rizzitelli's son Tommy to play drums on the project's new album, Entrevues, which came out in 2020.[4] In 2023, the duo published the album Personal Duty.[7][8] Perrier died in 2023.[9]

Band members

edit

Final lineup

  • Dominique "Terracota" Perrier – keyboards
  • Tommy Rizzitelli – drums

Original lineup

  • Dominique "Terracota" Perrier – keyboards
  • Roger "Bunny" Rizzitelli – drums, percussion

Other members

  • Janet Woollacott – vocals (died 2011)
  • Lilli Lacombe – violin, vocals
  • Michel Valy – bass
  • Laurent Faucheux – drums
  • Alain Pype – drum programming
  • Patrick Rondat – guitar

Discography

edit

1977–1980[10]

  • Space Art (1977)
  • Trip in the Center Head (1979)
  • Play Back (1980)

2012–2023

  • Space Art Tribute – credited as Dominique Perrier Project (2012)
  • On Ne Dira Rien – Best of All Times (compilation, 2016)
  • Entrevues (2020)[11]
  • Personal Duty (2023)

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Richard, Philippe (29 November 2016). "Musique. Space Art, pionniers de l'electro à la française" [Music. Space Art, pioneers of French electro]. Ouest France (in French). Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  2. ^ "Space Art". C Zen Prod. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  3. ^ Fitzgerald, Colin (15 November 2016). "Classic albums from French proto-electro duo Space Art get reissues alongside new remix EP". Tiny Mix Tapes. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  4. ^ a b "A new album from SPACE ART, the legendary French group with 3 millions of albums sold". 24 Presse. 21 July 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  5. ^ "[Musique Bretonne] Les vibrations lithiques de STONE AGE" [[Breton Music] The lithic vibrations of STONE AGE]. argedour.bzh (in French). 6 January 2016. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
  6. ^ a b Schelle, Stephan (September 2012). "Dominique Perrier Project – Space Art Tribute". MusikZirkus-Magazin.de (in German). Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  7. ^ "Space Art – Personal Duty". desertedislandmusic.nl. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
  8. ^ "Personal Duty". bandcamp.com. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
  9. ^ "El músico y teclista francés Dominique Perrier ha muerto a la edad de 73 años" [French musician and keyboardist Dominique Perrier has died at the age of 73]. FutureMusic.es (in Spanish). 4 October 2023. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
  10. ^ "Discographie Space Art" [Space Art Discography]. Lescharts.com (in French). Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  11. ^ "News". Deserted Island Music. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
edit