L'Amour fou (album)
L’Amour fou | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by Françoise Hardy | ||||
Released | 2012 (France) | |||
Recorded |
Studio Labomatic, Paris, France Studio M1, Skopje, Macedonia | |||
Genre | French pop | |||
Length | 37:00 | |||
Language | French | |||
Label | Virgin Records/EMI Group | |||
Françoise Hardy chronology | ||||
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L’Amour fou (Crazy Love) is the 27th and last studio album of the French popular singer Françoise Hardy. Released in France on November 5th, 2012 on CD Virgin/EMI (5099997278726), and December 3th, 2012 on LP Virgin/EMI (5099997278719).
It was published in Great Britain in April 15th, 2013 on CD, Virgin/EMI (5099997278726).
The ultimate album
The album L’Amour fou (Crazy Love) contains ten original songs where Hardy sings over ambient piano and the Macedonian Radio Symphonic Orchestra’s string arrangements. This album marks the 50 years of musical career of the singer (her debut album was released in November 1962), appearing simultaneously with a book also called L’Amour fou.[1]
“My publisher wanted another book after my autobiography which met some success,” [2] she says, “and I had these stories originally written for myself many years ago. Stories exploring the pain of love. He encouraged me to rewrite them and they came out in conjunction with the album.” On the album, Hardy swings a literary connection by turning a Victor Hugo poem into a lyric. “I liked the melody, and while I generally do not like poems, this one was a marvel of simplicity. It goes: ‘Why are you coming to see me if you have nothing to tell me?’ I like that. […] The album did not find a wide audience when issued in France. Radio did not play it. Radio only plays music for kids, and for an artist like myself who does not tour, well, I need radio.”[3]
In 2015, in interviews given to various media[4] after a serious health accident in March, Françoise Hardy announces that she has decided to put an end to her musical career. L’Amour fou is her last album.
Background
- Photographer: Gilles-Marie Zimmermann.
- Artworker: Jean-Louis Duralek.
- Instrumentalists:
- Drum kit: Fabrice Moreau (3-4-6-8-9), Mathieu Pigné (5), Erick Benzi (9).
- Double bass: Laurent Vernerey (3).
- Guitar: Michel Aymé (7), Erick Benzi (9), François Maurin (9).
- Bass guitar: Laurent Vernerey (1-4-6-8-9), Pascal Colomb (2), Édouard Marie (5), Calogero (7).
- Electric guitar: Dominique Blanc-Francard (3), Pascal Colomb (4), Arman Méliès (5), Darko Fitzgerald (5).
- Steel-string acoustic guitar: Thierry Stremler (8).
- Piano: Thierry Stremler (1-3-8), Pascal Colomb (2-4), Alain Lanty (4), Julien Noël (5), Dominique Spagnolo (7), Erick Benzi (9), François Maurin (9).
- Kettledrums: Pascal Colomb (2).
- Tom-tom drum: Julien Doré (5).
- String section: Macedonian Radio Symphonic Orchestra, dirigé par Dzjian Emin (1-3-5-7-8), Pascal Colomb (2-4), Alain Lanty (6).
Track list
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "L'Amour fou" | Françoise Hardy | Thierry Stremler | 2:29 |
2. | "Les Fous de Bassan" | Françoise Hardy | Pascal Colomb | 3:48 |
3. | "Mal au cœur" | Françoise Hardy | Thierry Stremler | 3:09 |
4. | "Si vous n'avez rien à me dire…" | Victor Hugo[5] | Bertrand Pierre[6] | 3:44 |
5. | "Normandia" | Julien Doré | Julien Doré | 4:56 |
6. | "Piano-bar" | Françoise Hardy | Alain Lanty | 3:29 |
7. | "Pourquoi vous ?" | Françoise Hardy | Calogero | 3:31 |
8. | "Soie et fourrures" | Françoise Hardy | Thierry Stremler | 3:33 |
9. | "L'Enfer et le Paradis" | Benoît Carré, Françoise Hardy | Benoît Carré[7] | 4:05 |
10. | "Rendez-vous dans une autre vie" | Françoise Hardy | François Maurin | 3:51 |
Total length: |
37:00 |
Notes and references
- ↑ Released in France in October 31, 2012, Éditions Albin Michel.
- ↑ Françoise Hardy, Le Désespoir des singes... et autres bagatelles, Paris, Éditions Robert Laffont, October 9, 2008.
- ↑ About Françoise Hardy collected by Garth Cartwright in Sunday Times, April 14, 2013, Magazine, Culture/Music section: “We love her, yé-yé-yé”.
- ↑ RTL: June 25, by Marc-Olivier Fogiel - BFM TV: July 23, by Philippe Dufreigne - Europe 1: July 27, by Thierry Geffrotin.
- ↑ Words of the poem called Chanson, from the collection of poems, Les Contemplations.
- ↑ Ex member of Pow woW; he continued his solo career. He set to music poems by Victor Hugo which he recorded on an album called Si vous n’avez rien à me dire, published by Bonsai Music, November 18, 2010.
- ↑ Member of Lilicub.