Posts tagged w/ French singers

French Music - Patrick Bruel

Posted by Chanda

Another of my favorite French singers is Patrick Bruel and he just released a new album called Seul o presque (Alone or almost) with live acoustic versions of his songs that were recorded while he was on tour.  Born Maurice Benguigui on May 14, 1959, in Tlemcen, Algeria, he was slow to find success as a singer, but eventually topped the French music charts with six of his albums including Entre Deux (2002), which is a classic chanson française double CD with duets featuring Jean-Jacques Goldman and Renaud, among others.   That CD sold more than 2 million copies and made Bruel the highest-paid French singer that year.  My favorite album of his is Juste avant (another of his #1s) and my favorite song is Tout s’efface.  However, his chart-topping single Qui a le droit (Who has the right) is probably the most well-known of his entire repetoire.  It talks about how people are not upfront and sometimes even lie to children thinking it is best for them, when it really isn’t as they grow up with unanswered questions, fears and anguish, especially as regards the loss of a parent, which is what Patrick himself went through at the tender age of 1.

Here are the lyrics:

On m’avait dit : “Te poses pas trop de questions.
Tu sais petit, c’est la vie qui t’ répond.
A quoi ça sert de vouloir tout savoir ?
Regarde en l’air et voit c’ que tu peux voir.”

On m’avait dit : “Faut écouter son père.”
Le mien a rien dit, quand il s’est fait la paire.
Maman m’a dit : “T’es trop p’tit pour comprendre.”
Et j’ai grandi avec une place à prendre.

[Refrain] :
Qui a le droit, qui a le droit,
Qui a le droit d’ faire ça
A un enfant qui croit vraiment
C’ que disent les grands ?

On passe sa vie à dire merci,
Merci à qui, à quoi ?
A faire la pluie et le beau temps
Pour des enfants à qui l’on ment.

On m’avait dit que les hommes sont tous pareils.
Y a plusieurs dieux, mais y’ a qu’un seul soleil.
Oui mais, l’ soleil il brille ou bien il brûle.
Tu meurs de soif ou bien tu bois des bulles.

A toi aussi, j’ suis sur qu’on t’en a dit,
De belles histoires, tu parles… que des conneries !
Alors maintenant, on s’ retrouve sur la route,
Avec nos peurs, nos angoisses et nos doutes.

[Refrain]

On passe sa vie à dire merci,
Merci à qui, à quoi ?
A faire la pluie et le beau temps
Pour des enfants à qui l’on ment.

Besides a best-selling singer, he is also an actor and professional poker player.  He has acted in more than 40 different television and film productions and has won the World Series of Poker.  His official website is www.patrickbruel.com.  There, you can hear his music, read about him and even buy mp3 albums.

 

French Music - Jean Jacques Goldman

Posted by Chanda

Okay, so I’ve written many posts on my favorite French musicians and singers and repeatedly mentioned how much I believe music is one of the best and most interesting ways to learn a foreign language.  When I was finally able to understand the lyrics written by Jean Jacques Goldman, I really felt like all the ups and downs of learning a foreign language were for a reason.  A good French friend of mine introduced me to Goldman’s moving lyrics.  Because of his singing and especially his songwriting, Goldman is extremely popular among French speakers and according to Wikipedia, Goldman was the second highest grossing French pop singer in 2003, just behind Johnny Hallyday.

Jean Jacques Goldman was born in Paris, France on October 11, 1951 to a Polish father and a German mother.  At the age of 11, his parents had him learn how to play the violin and then, the piano.  As an adolescent, he was very shy.  At the age of 14, he became completely enthralled with music.  One of his earliest idols was Aretha Franklin.  He then began learning how to play guitar.  One of the first groups he formed with his school friends sang gospel at the local church.  Although he was completely into his music, he spent plenty of time studying and holds two degrees, one from the École de Hautes Études Commerciales de Lille (Lille Higher School of Business) and another in sociology.  After studying, he basically backpacked his way with a friend through Sweden, Turkey, Canada, the USA and Mexico.  He recorded an English language album in 1975 with the group Taï Phong which was somewhat successful, but Jean Jacques did not feel ready to tour with the group and so, Michael Jones came along to replace him.  The two became lifelong friends (Jean Jacques even named his son after him.)  Although reluctant at first, Jean Jacques began to go it solo with French songs and an Anglo-Saxon style upon signing a contract for five albums with Epic Records.  Inspired by the music of the 70’s, he attained the number 1 spot for the first time on the French charts on May 9, 1981.  He had many ups and downs as his career started off with this ‘Goldman Style’.  But, lasting success finally arrived with the single Quand la musique est bonne.  Many of his songs have a social awareness aspect to them and Goldman’s optimism is particularly appealing.  Comme toi evokes his personal link to the collective Jewish memory, Je te donne is about respecting differences and Rouge is about the end of communism, but not the end of the ideals which many believe to be noble.

Jean Jacques has always known well how to surround himself with great people to make beautiful music and create excellent shows including Jones, Bernard Schmidt and Carole Fredericks. In all, Goldman has released twenty-four albums including five as part of the very successful trio he formed in the middle of his solo career Fredericks / Goldman / Jones.  He has written and composed entire albums for Johnny Hallyday, Celine Dion and others.

Because I was so motivated by them as a French learner, I would like to share some of the lyrics that have touched me most with all of you (although it is difficult to do artistic justice when translating the lyrics, I have provided loose English translations since many of you are beginning French learners):

“Aujourd’hui, on n’a plus le droit, ni d’avoir faim, ni d’avoir froid…” (”Today, we don’t have the right anymore neither to be hungry nor to be cold…”) - Les Restos du Coeur

“Il y a une question dans ‘je t’aime’ qui demande “et m’aimes-tu, toi?’…” (”There’s a question in ‘I love you’ which asks ‘and do you love me?’”) - Sache que je

“Mais n’être plus rien après tant, c’est pas juste… (But, not to be anything anymore after so long is not fair…”) - Quand tu danses  

“Y aura des jardins, d’l'amour et du pain…des chansons, du vin, on manquera de rien… (There will be gardens, love and bread…songs, wine, no one will be in need of anything…”) - Rouge

“Je suis d’un pays d’un horizon d’une frontière…qui sonne guerre, qui sonne éternel hiver… Je suis d’une région d’une langue d’une histoire…qui sonne loin qui sonne bataille et mémoire” (I’m from a country with a horizon, a border…that sounds like war, that sounds like an eternel winter…I’m from a region, a language, a history…that sounds far away, that sounds like a battle and memory”) - Une fille de l’Est

Jean Jacques Goldman’s official website can be found at www.jjgoldman.net.

 

French Music - The Biggest Rock Star You’ve Never Heard Of

Posted by Chanda

Quite possibly the highest-paid French singer (8.75 million euros in 2006 according to Figaro), Johnny Hallyday was born Jean Philippe Léo Smet in Paris on June 15, 1943, to Hugette and Léon Smet.  As a small child, he lived for four years in Great Britain with his paternal aunt, a dancer and silent film actress.  Years later, his cousin Desta met an American artist by the name of Lemoine (Lee) Ketcham and they performed all over Europe under the stage name Les Hallyday.  Johnny traveled with them for a time, then went to boarding school in Germany and learned to play violin and took guitar, dance, voice and drama lessons.  At the age of nine, he began performing on stage.

On March 14, 1960, he released his first single “Laissez les filles” after being discovered by Jacques Wolfsohm, the artistic director for Vogue records.  Later that year, he went on his first tour as the opening act for singer Sacha Distel.  His first album Hello Johnny was also released in 1961. 

He is considered by some to be the French equivalent of Elvis Presley, perhaps because Elvis was one of his idols as a young boy and as he started his rock and roll career.  In February 1962, he performed for Jackie Kennedy and he was introduced to the United States public when he went on tour throughout the country that year after releasing the album recorded in Nashville entitled Johnny Sings American Rocking Hits.  He appeared on the Ed Sullivan show alongside American singing star Connie Francis on July 1st.   Despite these early successes in America and the fact that he owns a home in LA and spends a great deal of time in the US, he remains rather unknown outside his native country. 

In France, he attracts huge crowds as he is considered to be a top stage performer (most recently, 500,000 for his 2000 performance 100% Johnny: Live à la Tour d’Eiffel which also attracted 9.5 million television viewers), but he is also widely known for his high-profile romances and love affairs having married and divorced several times. 

Some Johnny facts:
500 songs recorded
400 tours
45 albums (18 of them platinum)
100 million records sold
15 million people have attended his concerts
28 movies 

At the age of 64, Johnny Hallyday retired from the stage in 2007. 

His official website is:  http://www.johnnyhallyday.com/ 

And here’s a video of the song he released in 2008 entitled Si mon coeur.