Island arcs, active and passive margins are the best tectonic settings to generate fertile reservoirs likely to be involved in subsequent granitoid genesis. In such environments, greywackes are abundant crustal rock types and thus are good candidates to generate large quantities of granitoid magmas. We performed a series of experiments, between 100 and 2000 MPa, on the fluid-absent melting of a quartz-rich aluminous metagreywacke composed of 32 wt% plagioclase (Pl) (An(22)), 25 wt% biotite (Bt) (X(Mg)45), and 41 wt% quartz (Qtz). Eighty experiments, averaging 13 days each, were carried out using a powder of minerals (less than or equal to 5 mu m) and a glass of the same composition. The multivariant field of the complex reaction Bt + Pl + Qtz double left right arrow Grt/Crd/Spl + Opx + Kfs + melt limited by the Opx-in and Bt-out curves, is located between 810-860 degrees C at 100 MPa, 800-850 degrees C at 200 MPa, 810-860 degrees C at 300 MPa, 820-880 degrees C at 500 MPa, 860-930 degrees C at 800 MPa, 890-990 degrees C at 1000 MPa, and at a temperature lower than 1000 degrees C at 1500 and 1700 MPa. The melting of biotite + plagioclase + quartz produced melt + orthopyroxene(Opx) + cordierite (Crd) or spinel (Spl) at 100, 200 and 300 MPa, and melt + orthopyroxene + garnet (Grt) from 500 to 1700 MPa (+ Qtz, Pl, FeTi Oxide at all pressures). K-feldspar (Kfs) was found as a product of the reaction in some cases and we observed that the residual plagioclase was always strongly enriched in orthoclase component. The P-T surface corresponding to the multivariant field of this reaction is about 50 to 100 degrees C wide. At temperatures below the appearance of orthopyroxene, biotite is progressively replaced by garnet with increasing P. At 850 degrees C, we observed that (1) the modal proportion of garnet increases markedly with P; (2) the grossular content of the garnet increases regularly from about 4 mol% at 500 MPa to 15 mol% at 2000 MPa. These changes can be ascribed to the reaction Bt + Pl + Qtz double left right arrow Grt + Kfs + melt with biotite + plagioclase + quartz on the low-P side of the reaction. As a result, at 2000 MPa, we observed the progressive disappearance of biotite without production of orthopyroxene. These experiments emphasize the importance of this reaction for the understanding of partial melting processes and evolution of the lower continental crust. Ca-poor Al-metagreywackes represent fertile rocks at commonly attainable temperatures (i.e. 800-900 degrees C), below 700 MPa. There, 30 to 60 vol.% of melt can be produced. Above this pressure, temperatures above 900 degrees C are required, making the production of granitoid magmas more difficult. Thin layers of gneisses composed of orthopyroxene, garnet, plagioclase, and quartz(+/- biotite), interbedded within sillimanite-bearing paragneisses, are quite common in granulite terrains. They may result from partial melting of metagreywackes and correspond to recrystallized mixtures of crystals (+ trapped melt) left behind after removal of a major proportion of melt. Available experimental constraints indicate that extensive melting of pelites takes place at a significantly lower temperature(850 degrees C +/- 20) than in Al-metagreywackes (950 degrees C +/- 30), at 1000 MPa. The common observation that biotite is no longer stable in aluminous paragneisses while it still coexists commonly with orthopyroxene, garnet, plagioclase and quartz, provides rather tight temperature constraints for granulitic metamorphism.