Performance · Other credits

Michel Carre

Michel Carre is credited on 97 releases across 23 albums tracked on Gatefold, active 1960–2025 — the collector-built map of who actually made the music.

Photo of Michel Carre

97

Pressings credited

23

Albums

7

Decades active

1

In collections

Biography

Michel Carré (French pronunciation: [miʃɛl kaʁe]; 20 October 1821, Besançon – 27 June 1872, Argenteuil) was a prolific French librettist. He went to Paris in 1840 intending to become a painter but took up writing instead. He wrote verse and plays before turning to writing libretti. He wrote the text for Charles Gounod's Mireille (1864) on his own, and collaborated with Eugène Cormon on Bizet's Les pêcheurs de perles. However, the majority of his libretti were completed in tandem with Jules Barbier, with whom he wrote the libretti for numerous operas, including Camille Saint-Saëns's Le timbre d'argent (libretto written in 1864, first performed in 1877), Gounod's Faust (1859), Roméo et Juliette (1867), and Offenbach's Les contes d'Hoffmann (1881). As with the other libretti by Barbier and himself, these were adaptations of existing literary masterworks. His son, Michel-Antoine Carré (1865–1945), followed in his father's footsteps, also writing libretti, and later directing silent films. His nephew Albert Carré (1852–1938) also wrote libretti.

Bio from Wikipedia

Credited work

97 releases · 23 albums · active 1960–2025

  • Performance · 111
  • Other credits · 13

Studios: Santa Monica Sound Recorders · Studio Guillaume Tell · Transparent Studio, Munich · Chameleon Recording Studios Hamburg

Discography

Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Frequent collaborators

Around the web

See who really made the music.

Gatefold maps every producer, engineer, and player across your shelf — the credits no one else surfaces.

Start your shelf →

Free forever. Works with 10 records or 10,000.