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· Beautiful 2CD-Digi-Pack
· Musical settings and recordings
from the early 80s
· Bi-lingual liner notes
(German + English)
· Musical arrangements and
direction: François Rauber,
Piano: Gérard Jouannest
· Lyrics by various artists like: Serge
Gainsbourg, Jean Paul Sartre,
Jacques Brel, Gérard Jouannest
and others
Style: Chanson
Format: CD
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:: Juliette Greco - The Legend Of Chanson |
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| CD 1 |
| 1. |
Je suis bien |
| 2. |
Y'a que les hommes pour s'épouser |
| 3. |
Accordéon |
| 4. |
Paris Canaille |
| 5. |
Non, monsieur je n'ai pas 20 ans |
| 6. |
Lola la rengaine |
| 7. |
Les années d'autrefois |
| 8. |
Il est trop tard |
| 9. |
La Javanaise |
| 10. |
Je hais les dimanches |
| 11. |
On n'oublie rien |
| 12. |
Déshabillez-moi |
| 13. |
Trois petites notes de musique |
| 14. |
Le Pull-over |
| 15. |
Monsieur Fauk'ner |
| 16. |
Feline |
| 17. |
Voir un ami pleurer |
CD 2 |
| 1. |
Maréchal ... |
| 2. |
Jolie Môme |
| 3. |
Chanson pour l'auvergnat |
| 4. |
Bleu sans cocaÏne |
| 5. |
Parlez-moi d'amour |
| 6. |
Le temps des cerises |
| 7. |
Je suis comme je suis |
| 8. |
Mon fils chante |
| 9. |
C'était bien |
| 10. |
Les feuilles mortes |
| 11. |
S'il pleuvait des larmes |
| 12. |
Rêveuse et fragile |
| 13. |
J'arrive |
| 14. |
Vieille |
| 15. |
La place aux ormeaux |
| 16. |
Les canotiers |
| 17. |
Si tu t'imagines |
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| :: Information |
Choice of language: |
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The black turtle neck sweater and the tight pants may have been exchanged
for an equally black shiny robe. As soon as her miraculous voice appears
though, it's easy for her fans to pretend. Pretend it's 1946, when she
started the "Tabou" club in deepest St. Germain-des-Prés with her
best friend Anne-Marie Cazalis. Pretend it's 1950, when the coolest of
cool the Latin Quarter of Paris had to offer could be found gasping and
smoking at her feet: Albert Camus or Jean-Paul Sartre. It's not about
the black robe, of course. It's about that voice. Her devotées have
called its sound velvet and dark. Other admirers have called it rough
and dark. Which basically means that it's versatile. A voice comfortable
in any given role, whether it sounds exotic as "La Javanaise", lascivious
and careless as a "Paris Canaille" or completely lost in dreams and
nostalgic as in "Les années d'autrefois". The voice of an actress.
Lest we forget, Madame Juliette started out as an actress. Born May 2nd,
1927 in Montpellier, and after a less than happy childhood (how could
it have been happy when she was deported to Ravensbrueck concentration
camp with her sister?) she succumbed to the lure of the theatre.
Chansons followed suit, turned out to be her real calling. Soon she
sighed, lived the soundtracks for a post-war, intellectually sophisticated
new wave of literature, art and film - they call her the "Black rose
of existentialism" with good reason. - Peeping in where Sartre and
Camus used to sin and suffer soon became a tourist sport, and la
Gréco became less acute for her audience for a while. Yet she always
had tremendous comebacks - for instance in 1957 at the Paris Olympia,
or 1991... for many fans, she has simply never been away, though.
This collection gathers some fantastic renditions, naturally based on
the finest imaginable chanson material penned by the masters. Serge
Gainsbourg, Jacques Brel, Charles Aznavour, George Brassens and -
by no means least, her long-time partner in création, pianist (and
husband) Gérard Jouannest. Most of these recordings were made in
the early 1980s, with a variety of musical settings from solo grand
piano backing to little combos - happy or sad. Strings for good
measure? A bonus which Juliette Gréco can work with, sure - but the
smaller and darker the stage setting, the more she is in her element
- and in our hearts.
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