14 years ago : Françoise Hardy

Françoise Hardy

Françoise Hardy is a pop and fashion icon celebrated as a French national treasure. With her signature breathy alto, she was one of the earliest and most definitive French participants in the yé-yé movement (a style of pop music that initially emerged from Italy, Switzerland, Spain, and Portugal before spreading to France in the early 1960s). She is one of only a few female vocalists who could or would write and perform her own material. She offered a startling contrast to the boy’s club of French pop in the early ’60s, paving the way for literally thousands of women all over the globe. Known for romantically nostalgic songs and melancholy lyrics, Hardy’s first single, “Tous Les Garçons et les Filles,” sold over two million copies and made her a European star overnight. Outside music, Hardy also established herself as a fashion model, actress, astrologer, and author. Though she has recorded songs in several languages, it was her early French tunes — that ranged across pop, jazz, blues, and more — that helped to establish her as a legend. In the ’70s, she reinvented herself as an artist transcending teen-friendly pop to interpret songs by everyone from Leonard Cohen to Patrick Modiano and has remained a grande dame of French popular song ever since.

Hardy was born in Paris in 1944. She and her sister were raised by a single mom who made a meager living as an accountant’s assistant. Money was always in short supply. After graduating from high school, she was given a guitar by her absent father — he had to be convinced by her mother to purchase it. As a teen she was influenced heavily by French chanson, especially the music of Charles Trenet and Cora Vaucaire. Thanks to the pervasive reach of Radio Luxembourg, she also found inspiration in the music of English-speaking singers such as Paul Anka, the Everly Brothers, Elvis Presley, Cliff Richard, and Connie Francis. While attending the Sorbonne to study political science and Germanic languages, she answered a newspaper notice advertising for young singers. Hardy failed that first audition, but she was inspired to attend others. She auditioned a bit later for the French Vogue label and signed her first recording contract at the end of 1961. She was 17. In April of the following year, she left university and released her first record, “Oh Oh Chéri,” written by Johnny Hallyday’s creative team. The flipside was her own composition “Tous Les Garçons et les Filles.” Riding the emergent French wave of yé-yé introduced to the country by songwriter Serge Gainsbourg, the recording was a smash, selling over two million copies. In 1963, she took fifth place (for Monaco) in the Eurovision Song Contest with “L’amour s’en Va” and was awarded the Grand Prix du Disque. Soon she was on the cover of virtually every top music magazine. It was while working on a photo shoot for a magazine that Hardy would meet photographer Jean-Marie Perier, who transformed her image from a shy schoolgirl into a cultural trend setter. He became not only her lover but also the greatest influence on her early career. Their shoot established her as a fashion icon as well as a pop star, and Perier persuaded Hardy to model. Because of her place in pop music, he was able to persuade top designers including Paco Rabanne, Chanel, and Yves Saint-Laurent to adopt her as a model. French director Roger Vadim offered her a prime role in Château en Suède; the experience only increased her national popularity, but her heart was in music not cinema. In 1963 she sang at the L’Olympia Theatre in Paris for the first time as an opening act for yé-yé singer Richard Anthony. She stole she show. Her debut album was essentially an umbrella for her singles and sold exceptionally well, and the recording won the Prix de l’Académie Charles-Cros and Trophée de la Télévision Française awards. In 1965, she tried film again, this time Jean-Daniel Pollet’s Une Balle Au Cœur. Released in February of 1966, her performance drew raves from critics and audiences alike. Hardy’s reputation as a singer spread across Europe and soon she was spending time with artists ranging from the Beatles and Mick Jagger to Bob Dylan (the latter once refused to play his second set at L’Olympia until she showed up). She quickly became her country’s most exportable pop star, releasing ten albums between 1962 and 1968.

Perier and Hardy ended their romance in 1967, the stress and strain of a jet-set lifestyle was beginning to take its toll. That said, she met songwriter and pop star Jacques Dutronc the same year and fell in love — they wed in 1981. After massive whirlwind tours of Europe, she cut her sophomore outing, Ma Jeunesse Fout L’Camp, which was issued in 1968, just before the curtain fell on yé-yé in France. That same year she gave a farewell performance at London’s famed Savoy and seemingly retired from the stage to concentrate on her recording career. This caused friction with her label and resulted in a court battle from which she emerged free but wary of all future business dealings. Hardy carefully considered her next step. In 1970, as a nod to her fans in Switzerland and Germany, she released the German-language Träume for United Artists. But it was a stop-gap. 1971’s self-titled offering for Sonopress, written in collaboration with female Brazilian guitarist Tuca, was her first mature outing and featured the singles “Chanson d’O” and “La Question.” While it didn’t do well commercially, it remains the singer’s favorite recording and the one that established her as an influence on later generations. She didn’t care about the relatively poor sales; she considered it an artistic achievement, and history has proven her correct. The new decade also helped establish Hardy as burgeoning professional astrologer. In the summer of 1973 she gave birth to a son with Dutronc. Amazingly, the couple, not yet married, didn’t live together until well after their child was born.

Hardy signed to the North American Warner Brothers label late in the year, and proceeded to record Message Personnel with producer Michael Berger. The pair disagreed on many things during the sessions, but its title track single became one of her most beloved songs. In the spring of 1974 she worked with French violinist, composer, and singer Catherine Lara and English producer Del Newman for Entr’Acte. The album was only a moderate success commercially, but has since become one of her most beloved among fans. Hardy abandoned fashion in 1974, and all but left music for two years to concentrate on being a mother. She did write and record “Que Vas-Tu Faire” for the soundtrack of Claude Lelouch’s film Si C’était à Refaire. (It was arranged by Jean-Michel Jarre.)

Through a friend, Hardy met Gabriel Yared, a great fan of her music. He offered to produce and arrange a new album for her. Entitled Star, the set featured excellent material by herself, Michel Jonasz, Gainsbourg, William Sheller, Janis Ian, and Lara; it proved a commercial and critical success. Issued by Pathé-Marconi, Star revealed a different side of the singer, establishing her with a second generation of younger fans. The record sold exceptionally well and brought Hardy back to the forefront of French popular music. In all, the singer and producer/arranger cut four very successful albums together including J’Ecoute de la Musique Saoule (1978), Gin Tonic (1980), and A Suivre (1982, that was also the first of her albums to feature the talents of songwriter Jean Claude Vannier). The latter album featured two chart-topping singles in “Tamalou” and “Villégiature.” Fans have argued for decades that the album would have been even more successful had she resumed touring, but Hardy was far more concerned with astrology and motherhood. Over the next two years, she released only two new singles while her label focused on issuing compilations. In 1988 she issued Décalage. Announced as her final recording, her lyrics were set to music by name writers including William Sheller, Etienne Daho, and husband Dutronc. Interestingly, while it has developed a reputation as one of her finest records, it was greeted with only middling praise at the time. Apparently, fans expected more from a grand finale.

Her retirement proved short-lived. In 1992, she recorded the duet “Si Ca Fait Mal” with songwriter Alain Lubrano, a young singer/songwriter from the south of France. The topic, about love, sex, and AIDS, was cut for the AIDS fund-raising compilation album Urgence. She later re-recorded it as one of her own singles — again with Lubrano. In 1995, Hardy signed with Virgin Records. Le Danger, her debut for the label, appeared in 1996 and established her as a pop star — at the age of 52 — in the U.K. Hardy co-wrote all 13 songs, enlisting help from Lubrano and Rodolphe Burger (Kat Onoma). Deeply influenced by the alternative music scene — especially the music of Portishead — Hardy again reinvented her sound as a totally modern brand of indie pop. The album was successful beyond her dreams; she appeared at the BBC on radio and television, on John Peel’s program and eventually guested on recordings by Malcolm McLaren and Blur.

Hardy crowned the new century with her second Virgin album, Clair-Obscur, in 2000. The set was marked by a wide range of songs from composers ranging from Django Reinhardt, Lubrano, and Daho to Eric Clapton and Don Everly. It also included a pair of critically regarded duets in “Puisque Vous Partez en Voyage” with Dutronc, and “I’ll Be Seeing You” with Iggy Pop. In 2004, she issued Tant de Belles Choses, with songs by Lubrano, Benjamin Biolay, Thierry Stremler, and Jacno (Denis Quilliard of Stinky Toys fame). She also enlisted assistance from English singer/songwriter Ben Christophers and Irish songwriter Perry Blake. Her son, Thomas Dutronc, produced and/or played guitar on four tracks. Two years later she issued Parenthèses, a collection of duets with material from her back catalog. Her collaborators included Alain Bashung, Biolay, Rodolphe Burger, Maurane, Arthur H, and French film star Alain Delon. She also recorded with her husband and son at the same time — a first. The set’s first hit single was a version of “Partir Quand Même” with Julio Iglesias. Not touring left Hardy plenty of time for pursuits other than music and astrology, including writing. In 2008, Editions Robert Laffront published her memoir entitled Le Désespoir des Singes et Autres Bagatelles (The Monkey’s Despair and Other Trifles). The book became an instant best-seller. Hardy didn’t rest, however, and in 2010 issued the album La Pluie Sans Parapluie. She penned all the lyrics herself and collaborated on the music with Lubrano, Ben Christophers, Pascale Daniel, Stremler, and others. Rather than the cool, wry wit and melancholy that was her trademark, this set offered listeners a different portrait of the singer, one more sensitive and intimate. Two years later, Hardy celebrated her 50th anniversary in music with both a novel (her first) and an album that shared the title L’Amour Fou. She was also battling cancer of the lymphatic system and designated it her last album. She again composed all the lyrics with assistance on the music side from Stremler, Calogero, Benoît Carré (Lilicub) and Julien Doré. Dominique Blanc-Francard and Bénédicte Schmitt co-produced the recording.

While Hardy hasn’t set any sales records with her post-millennial output, virtually all of her recordings did well enough to remain commercially viable and enhance her legend. In the aftermath of publication and release of L’Amour Fou, the singer was absent for nearly five years. After its release she became ill while undergoing chemo and eventually ended up in a coma for eight days. While recovering and continuing to undergo treatment, she had little to no interest in recording again — that is, until she heard the song “Sleep” by the Finnish band Poets of the Fall. She played for producer and songwriter Erick Benzi (Celine Dion), who loved it. As a response, he sent Hardy several melodies of his own, inspiring her to pen lyrics for them. French indie songwriter La Grande Sophie (Sophie Huriaux) knew she had started writing again and emailed Hardy the song “Le Large.” Other composers who contributed were Pascale Daniel and Yael Naim, who gave her “You’re My Home.” When Hardy began recording with Benzi, the sessions went uncharacteristically smoothly, resulting in the album Personne d’Autre. Preceded by the single “Le Large”–which was also released as a video directed by François Ozon — the full-length was released in Europe and the U.S. in April of 2018.

Thom Jurek, Rovi

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Jean-Jacques Goldman

Jean-Jacques Goldman is a French singer-songwriter and music record producer. He is hugely popular in the French-speaking world. Since the death of Johnny . he has been the highest grossing living French pop rock act

Born in Paris and active in the music scene since 1975, he had a highly successful solo career in the 1980s, and was part of the trio Fredericks Goldman Jones, releasing another string of hits in the 1990s.

He also wrote successful albums and songs for many artists, including D’eux for Céline Dion, which is the most successful french language record to date.

He was also part of the Les Enfoirés charity collective from 1986 to 2016, and got his most notable official recognition in the English-speaking world for winning a Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1997, as a co-author of three tracks on Céline Dion’s Falling Into You.

Despite a voluntary retirement from the music scene in the early 2000s, he remains very popular and influential in France and French-speaking countries.

https://peoplepill.com/i/jean-jacques-goldman

Sinéad O’Connor, acclaimed Dublin singer, dies aged 56

Irish singer Sinéad O’Connor has died at the age of 56, her family has announced.

In a statement, the singer’s family said: “It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our beloved Sinéad. Her family and friends are devastated and have requested privacy at this very difficult time.”

The acclaimed Dublin performer released 10 studio albums, while her song Nothing Compares 2 U was named the number one world single in 1990 by the Billboard Music Awards. Her version of the ballad, written by musician Prince, topped the charts around the globe and earned her three Grammy nominations.

https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/music/2023/07/26/sinead-oconnor-acclaimed-dublin-singer-dies-aged-56/

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Jane B

Jane Birkin, actor and singer, dies aged 76

The Anglo-French singer and actor Jane Birkin has died at the age of 76, the French culture ministry has announced.

The singer had been forced to postpone several concerts in Paris scheduled for May after breaking her shoulder in March 2022. This followed another string of cancelled shows after Birkin had a stroke in September 2021.

“I’ve always been a big optimist, and I realise that it still takes me a little while to be able to be on stage again and with you. I love being with you so much,” she said in a statement at the time.

She was found dead at her home in Paris, French media reported.

Birkin was born in London on 14 December 1946 to an actor mother and naval officer father. At 17, she married the James Bond composer John Barry but the marriage lasted only three years.

She catapulted to fame after starring in the 1966 film Blow-Up – which featured a scene in which Birkin appeared nude before crossing the channel in 1968 at the age of 22 to star in a satirical romantic comedy Slogan alongside the pop-poet Serge Gainsbourg, who was 18 years her senior.

It was the start of a 13-year on- and off-screen relationship that made them France’s most famous couple, in the spotlight as much for their bohemian and hedonistic lifestyle as for their work.

Despite being banned on radio in several countries and condemned by the Vatican because of its overtly sexual lyrics, their 1968 song Je t’aime … moi non plus (“I love you … me neither”) achieved worldwide success and reached No 1 in the UK singles chart.

Their relationship has been frequently described as “tumultuous”, and Birkin reportedly wrote in her 2020 diaries that there had been violence between the couple. During one of their rows, Birkin launched herself into the River Seine after throwing a custard pie in Gainsbourg’s face.

But she frequently defended the man with whom she became so closely associated, including against charges by one singer that he was a “harasser”, in an interview in the Times in 2020.

The Guardian

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Whitney Houston

American Singer

Whitney Houston

American singer and actress who was one of the best-selling musical performers of the 1980s and ’90s.

“She was the perfect combination of a vocalist with an incomparable timbre (yes, that’s subjective but I have yet to come across someone who didn’t like it) – rich and velvety with a slightly metallic and at times almost operatic-like sound to it; a large, even, well-supported and connected range; heaps of emotion and soul; a lot of power and a huge volume output; incredible vocal stamina; a well-controlled vibrato; strong and resonant belts and a full, piercing head register; and she had a host of technical skills and great musicianship that allowed her to do almost anything with her voice. And when she sang live, she was – unlike many others – able to replicate or surpass the same tone, power and range she displayed on record on stage as well. It’s no wonder she earned the simple yet self-explanatory nickname « The Voice ». From 1985 to 1991, Whitney was a force to be reckoned with, with very little in the way of a worthy contemporary rival – even Mariah Carey and Céline Dion, as brilliant as they are in their own right – could not match her in terms of power, the purity of tone, fluidity of lyrical phrasing or consistent live performances.”

https://thesonginsidethetune.wordpress.com/2013/12/24/whitney-houston-the-rise-the-fall-and-the-legacy-of-the-voice/

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Jenny Lewis

Also known as leader of charting indie outfit Rilo Kiley, Jenny Lewis makes searching, twang-inflected indie pop/rock of her own as a soloist. Having had her first taste of stardom when she was a child, appearing in a series of television shows and in films, she grew disenchanted with acting and turned to music as she came of age, forming Rilo Kiley with Blake Sennett in 1998. Their work drew upon the seediness of her native San Fernando Valley and nearby Hollywood, but she began to expand her horizons in 2006 when she released a country-tinged solo debut called Rabbit Fur Coat. Rilo Kiley stuck around for another album, but Rabbit Fur Coat established Lewis as a formidable singer/songwriter in her own right, and her reputation only grew after the group split, thanks to the rustic Americana of 2008’s Acid Tongue and the slicker, retro-styled pop sheen apparent on 2014’s The Voyager. Following the hazier On the Line in 2019, part of 2023’s Joy’All consisted of songs written during a songwriting workshop led by Beck.

Born to a pair of entertainers in Las Vegas, Nevada on January 8, 1977, Lewis relocated to the San Fernando Valley as a child. Before she was ten years old she had appeared in a number of major commercials, and she wound up cast in Lucille Ball’s 1986 sitcom Life with Lucy. Guest spots in a variety of sitcoms followed in the next few years, culminating with prominent roles in two 1989 films: The Wizard and Troop Beverly Hills. Lewis acted into the mid-’90s — she wound up with recurring roles on the 1990 television show Shannon’s Deal and 1991’s Brooklyn Bridge — but after appearing in the 1998 feature film Pleasantville, she turned away from acting.

That year, Lewis formed Rilo Kiley with Sennett — the two were dating at the time — Pierre de Reeder, and Dave Rock. After releasing an eponymous EP in 1999, the group replaced Rock with Jason Boesel and released Take Offs and Landings in 2001 on Barsuk. Another indie record — The Execution of All Things, released on Saddle Creek — appeared in 2002 before the group inked a deal with Warner to distribute More Adventurous in 2004.

Just as Rilo Kiley was receiving a push from a major label, Lewis fielded an offer from Conor Oberst for his imprint Team Love. Lewis hired the Watson Twins as support for Rabbit Fur Coat, her 2006 solo debut. Greeted by positive reviews and a major media push, Rabbit Fur Coat overshadowed all previous Rilo Kiley albums, but it also wound up giving a boost to the band’s 2007 album, Under the Blacklight. Released on Warner proper, Under the Blacklight was Rilo Kiley’s most successful record — it wound up peaking at 22 on Billboard’s Top 200 — but the band splintered soon after its release. Although the official disbandment wasn’t announced until 2014, a year after the odds-and-ends collection Rkives appeared, Rilo Kiley never recorded together again.

Lewis quickly turned her attention to her solo career, recording the rousing Americana record Acid Tongue. Written in part with her new partner Johnathan Rice, Acid Tongue debuted at 24 upon its September 2008 release. Lewis next teamed with Rice for I’m Having Fun Now, a collaborative album released under the name Jenny and Johnny in 2010.

Lewis hired Ryan Adams to produce The Voyager, an album that evoked the heyday of classic AOR. The Voyager debuted at number nine upon its July 2014 release. In 2016, Lewis, Erika Forster, and Tennessee Thomas formed the trio Nice as Fuck, releasing an eponymous album in June. Lewis returned to her solo career in 2019 with the March release of On the Line, which featured co-productions by Adams, Beck, and Shawn Everett. It stalled at number 34 in the U.S. while becoming her first album to crack the Top 30 in the U.K. She next entered the studio with producer Dave Cobb (Jason Isbell, Brandi Carlile) to record a group of songs written partly on the road, pre-pandemic, and partly at home in Nashville during a week-long virtual songwriting workshop hosted by Beck in early 2021. (The latter included prompts such as “write a song with only clichés” and “write in free-form style.”) With appearances from Jon Brion (Chamberlin), Greg Leisz (pedal steel, B-Bender guitar), and Lucius’ Jess Wolfe (backing vocals) in addition to a core backing band and headed by Cobb, Joy’All marked her debut on Blue Note/Capitol in June 2023. (Stephen Thomas Erlewine).

https://www.allmusic.com/artist/jenny-lewis-mn0000812476/biography

https://lejournaldupeintre2.wordpress.com/

Painting news project

Les tableaux du peintre

Twitter

https://lejournaldupeintre2.wordpress.com/

Painting news project

Les tableaux du peintre

Twitter

Jean-Louis Murat

Singer Jean-Louis Murat died on Thursday May 25, Le Monde learned. He was 71 years old.

Born Jean-Louis Bergheaud on January 28, 1952, Jean-Louis Murat had recorded around twenty albums, including Dolorès, in 1996, Le Moujik et sa femme, in 2002 or A bird on a Pear in 2004. A best-of album by the artist, bringing together 20 of his most iconic tracks, is due out on Friday.

Recognizable by his blue eyes, his disheveled brown hair and his haunting voice, Jean-Louis Murat is inseparable from Puy-de-Dôme, where he has never stopped living. According to his former record company Pias, quoted by Agence France-Presse, it was at his home in Auvergne that he died.

“Sentiment Nouveau”, “Fort Alamo” “If I had to miss you”: his groove as well as his independence tinged with provocation made him a special artist in the French musical world.

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Cornelia Murr, musician

Though born in London and now based in Los Angeles, singer-songwriter Cornelia Murr spent time living in various locations around the United States growing up. On her debut album, 2018’s Lake Tear of the Clouds, she drew inspiration from the landscapes she experienced in upstate New York, mirroring the cyclical journey of water as it moves down from the Adirondack Mountains.  She produced the record with My Morning Jacket frontman Jim James, relying on her evocative vocals, mellotron, Omnichord, pocket piano, guitars, and percussion to create a spectral, meditative soundworld. After releasing the standalone single ‘Hang Yr Hat’ in 2021, Murr has returned with Corridor, a six-track EP out today via Full Time Hobby. Though the process of making it was marked by solitude and uncertainty, the collection is enchanting as much for its delicately intimate portrait of past and fragile relationships as it is for the sonic pathways Murr traverses to explore them. It’s a plea for change as well as an opportunity to refocus, learning how to carry every place you’ve been along with the simple knowledge that growth happens naturally, without fail.

https://ourculturemag.com/2022/11/25/artist-spotlight-cornelia-murr

https://lejournaldupeintre2.wordpress.com/

Painting news project

Les tableaux du peintre

Twitter

https://lejournaldupeintre2.wordpress.com/

Painting news project

Les tableaux du peintre

Twitter

Fairuz

She is considered by many as one of the leading vocalists and most famous singers in the history of the Arab world. Fairuz is considered the musical icon of Lebanon and is popularly known as “the soul of Lebanon”.

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Dani

Dani, a French singer and actress, best known for her work in the 60s and 70s, died on Monday, July 18.

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started