Chansons pour les pieds
Chansons pour les pieds | ||||
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Studio album by Jean-Jacques Goldman | ||||
Released | November 20, 2001 | |||
Recorded | Alès, 2001 | |||
Genre | Pop, gigue, tarentelle, rock | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Jean-Jacques Goldman chronology | ||||
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Chansons pour les pieds was a 2001 album by Jean-Jacques Goldman sung in French. The album was recorded at the Théâtre du Cratère d'Alès by Eric Van de Hel and Gildas Lointier, assisted by Renaud Van Welden. All songs were written by the singer himself. Released by JRG, the album met smash success on the charts : it topped the French and Belgian Albums Charts and remained charted for almost two years, and was #2 in Switzerland. As the title ("Songs for the Dance") suggests, all the tracks are devoted to dance and represent music styles (canon chorale, gigue, technoriental, slow, tarentelle, R&B, ballad, disco, rock, slow zouk, fanfare swing, pop).
There was a sole single from this album : "Et l'on y peut rien", which peaked at #7 in France, 37 in Belgium (Wallonia) and #61 in Switzerland.
Track listing
- "Ensemble" – 3:59
- "Et l'on n'y peut rien" – 3:38
- "Une poussière" – 5:33
- "La pluie" – 8:25
- "Tournent les violons" – 4:38
- "Un goût sur tes lèvres" – 4:29
- "Si je t'avais pas" – 4:50
- "C'est pas vrai" – 4:56
- "The Quo's in town tonite" – 5:14
- "Je voudrais vous revoir" – 5:12
- "Les p'tits chapeaux" – 3:54
- "Les choses" – 8:38
- "La vie c'est mieux quand on est amoureux" 1
1 Hidden track
Source : Allmusic.[1]
Personnel and credits
- Michael Jones, vocals
- Bruno Le Rouzic, bagpipes
- Bruno Le Rouzic and Frédéric Paris, flute
- Gildas Arzel, Michael Jones, and Patrice Tison, guitar
- Gildas Arzel, oud
- Marc Chantereau, percussion
- Carlo Rizzo, tambourine
- Gilles Chabenat, hurdy-gurdy
- François Breugnot and Christian Lemaître, violin
- Christophe Nègre, saxophone
- Denis Leloup, trombone
- Christian Martinez,Eric Mula and Jacques "Kako" Bessot, trumpet, cornet
- Philippe Slominski, bugle
- Jean-Pierre Solvès, clarinet, saxophone, baritone, piccolo
- Didier Havet, euphonium, sousaphone, trombone, bass
- Yvan Cassar, strings arrangements and direction
Release history
Date | Label | Country | Format | Catalog |
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November 20, 2001 | Columbia | Belgium, France, Switzerland | CD | 504735 |
December 11, 2001 | Sony | 5047352 | ||
Certifications
Country | Certification | Date | Sales certified |
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France[2] | Diamond | February 13, 2002 | 1,000,000 |
Switzerland[3] | Platinum | 2002 | 40,000 |
Charts
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Preceded by Invincible by Michael Jackson |
French SNEP number-one album November 24, 2001 - December 8, 2001 (3 weeks) |
Succeeded by L5 by L5 |
Preceded by Millésime / Live 00/01 by Pascal Obispo |
Belgian (Wallonia) number-one album December 8, 2001 (1 week) |
Succeeded by Les Mots by Mylène Farmer |
References
- ↑ Chansons pour les pieds, track listing Allmusic.com (Retrieved May 9, 2009)
- ↑ 2002 certifications in France Disqueenfrance.com Archived March 22, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. (Retrieved May 9, 2009)
- ↑ 2002 certification in Switzerland Swisscharts.com (Retrieved June 6, 2008)
- ↑ Chansons pour les pieds, Belgian (Wallonia) Albums Chart Ultratop.be (Retrieved May 9, 2009)
- ↑ Chansons pour les pieds, French Albums Chart Lescharts.com (Retrieved May 9, 2009)
- ↑ Chansons pour les pieds, Swiss Albums Chart Hitparade.ch Archived November 6, 2004, at the Wayback Machine. (Retrieved May 9, 2009)
- ↑ 2001 Belgian (Wallonia) Albums Chart Ultratop.be (Retrieved May 9, 2009)
- ↑ 2003 French Albums Chart Disqueenfrance.com Archived March 22, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. (Retrieved May 9, 2009)
- ↑ 2002 Belgian (Wallonia) Albums Chart Ultratop.be (Retrieved May 9, 2009)
- ↑ 2002 French Albums Chart Disqueenfrance.com Archived March 22, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. (Retrieved May 9, 2009)