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・ Music for Pets
・ Music for Piano (Cage)
・ Music for Piano and Drums
・ Music for Pleasure
・ Music for Pleasure (band)
・ Music for Pleasure (Monaco album)
・ Music for Pleasure (record label)
・ Music for Pleasure (The Damned album)
・ Music for Prague 1968
・ Music for Real Airports
・ Music for Relief
・ Music for Robots
・ Music for Speeding
・ Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta
・ Music for Strippers, Hookers, and the Odd On-Looker
Music for Supermarkets
・ Music for the Advancement of Hip Hop
・ Music for the Amorphous Body Study Center
・ Music for the Divine
・ Music for the Fifth World
・ Music for the Funeral of Queen Mary
・ Music for the Hard of Thinking
・ Music for the Jilted Generation
・ Music for the Maases
・ Music for the Mabinogi
・ Music for the Masses
・ Music for the Masses (disambiguation)
・ Music for the Masses (Lawrence music festival)
・ Music for the Masses Tour
・ Music for the Mature B-Boy


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Music for Supermarkets : ウィキペディア英語版
Music for Supermarkets

''Music for Supermarkets'' (''Musique pour Supermarché'') is a 1983 album of instrumental electronic music by Jean-Michel Jarre. It is notable for having only a single copy pressed, and the subsequent, deliberate destruction of its master plates, effectively making the copy unique.
== Production ==
In 1983, Jean Michel Jarre was asked to compose the background music for the supermarket-themed art exhibition ''Orrimbe show''. Jarre agreed, recording ''Music for Supermarkets'' ((フランス語:Musique pour Supermarché)) between February and May 1983. The exhibition, created by some young artists and friends of Jarre, ran at the Jean-Claude Riedel gallery between 2 and 30 June 1983, and the works of art on display would be auctioned off afterwards. Inspired by this, Jarre decided that the music accompanying the exhibition could be a one-off piece of art as well, and thus ''Music for Supermarkets'' would have only a single, unique copy pressed, to be auctioned for charity at Hotel Drouot. After the exhibition had ended, master tapes and plates were destroyed, making this the only existing copy in the world. It instantly became one of the most expensive and collectible albums in history. In the inside cover, 11 polaroid photos show the step-by-step creation of the disc, leaving one slot so that the final owner could add his photo with the album. The album owner was first kept anonymous, but later revealed to be a M. Gerard, who after a car crash woke up to the radio playing Jarre's track "Souvenir of China" (from the ''Concerts in China'' album); this album cost him 69,000 francs (10,500 euros).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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