Emmanuelle Parrenin

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MOTUS POCUS of Pierre Bastien and Emmanuelle Parrenin at Théâtre Berthelot in Montreuil, Seine-Saint-Denis

Emmanuelle Parrenin is a French folk singer, harpist and hurdy-gurdy player who was first active in the late 1960s and 1970s as part of "le mouvement folk".

Parrenin was born into a family steeped in classical music: her mother played the harp and her father the violin, and studied ballet as child.[1] She attended a Catholic boarding school but was expelled.[2] She expanded her musical horizons during her teenage years, and was influenced by meeting Eric Clapton and The Yardbirds, during a visit to England while a teenager.[3]

At age 19, she met the hurdy-gurdy player Christian Leroy Gour'han,[4] René Zosso [Wikidata], and Alan Stivell at Le Bourbon folk club.[1][3] The instrument itself made a deep impression on her and made her determined to learn how to perform with it.[2] She and others travelled to remote regions of France and other Francophone countries including Canada to record folksongs.[5][3] The recordings were donated to the Musée de l'Homme and the Musée National des Arts et Traditions Populaires.[3]

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